The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, April 12, 2021, Monday E-Edition, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 The BulleTin • Monday, april 12, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
MONDAY
BASEBALL
MLB, Boston Red Sox at Minnesota Twins
College, Oregon State at Oregon
MLB, Seattle Mariners at Baltimore Orioles
MLB, Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee Brewers
MLB, Regional Coverage
BASKETBALL
NBA, Philadelphia 76ers at Dallas Mavericks
NBA, Denver Nuggets at Golden State Warriors
GOLF
College, Western Intercollegiate, First Round
HOCKEY
Women’s, PWHPA Showcase
SOCCER
Premier League, West Brom vs Southampton
Premier League, Brighton & Hove Albion vs Everton
SOFTBALL
College, Georgia at Kentucky
Time
11 a.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
TV
MLB
PAC12
ROOT
FS1
MLB
4:30 p.m.
7:05 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN
4 p.m.
GOLF
4 p.m.
NBCSN
9:55 a.m. NBCSN
12:10 p.m. NBCSN
GOLF
College, Western Intercollegiate, Second Round
HOCKEY
NHL, Philadelphia Flyers at Washington Capitals
SOCCER
Women’s, International Friendly: France vs USA
CONCACAF Champions League,
Atlanta United FC vs Alajuelense
CONCACAF Champions League,
Portland Timbers vs Marathón
CONCACAF Champions League,
Cruz Azul vs Arcahaie FC
BASEBALL
4 p.m.
SEC
Time
TV
12:30 p.m. MLB
4 p.m.
ESPN
4 p.m.
ROOT
4 p.m.
SEC
4:30 p.m.
TNT
7 p.m. NBCSNW,
TNT
4 p.m.
GOLF
4 p.m.
NBCSN
noon
ESPN2
3 p.m.
FS1
5 p.m.
FS1
7:30 p.m.
FS1
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
OLYMIPIC
Report: Hotel will house Olympic athletes with
COVID-19 — Athletes at the Tokyo Olympics who come down
with minor symptoms of COVID-19 could be isolated in a
hotel lined up by local organizers of the games. The Japanese
news agency Kyodo on Sunday said organizers are working
to secure 300 rooms in a hotel near the Athletes’ Village. The
agency cited unnamed officials with “knowledge of the plan.”
The rooms would be for athletes and staff who do not need to
be hospitalized. The measures underline the risk during a pan-
demic. The Olympics are to open on July 23 and face strong
opposition from up to 80% of Japanese polled. The events will
involve about 15,000 athletes from more than 200 nations and
territories, and tens of thousands of other officials, judges, ad-
ministrators, media and broadcasters.
BASEBALL
Seager HR in 9th, Mariners rally late from 6 down,
top Twins — Kyle Seager hit his second homer of the game,
a three-run drive in the ninth inning to complete the Seattle
Mariners’ comeback from a six-run deficit to beat the Minne-
sota Twins 8-6 Sunday. Seager had four hits and Taylor Tram-
mell also homered for Seattle, which trailed 6-0 going into the
sixth. The Mariners won a road series for the first time since
Sept. 11-13, 2019, at Arizona.
— Bulletin wire reports
MLB
NHL
Monday, April 12
Baseball: Corbett at Madras, 4:30 p.m.
Softball: Madras at Corbett, 4:30 p.m.; philomath at Sis-
ters, 4:30 p.m.
Boys tennis: The dalles at redmond, 3 p.m.; hood river Val-
ley at ridgeview, 3 p.m.; Crook County at pendleton, 3 p.m.
Girls tennis: redmond at The dalles, 3 p.m.; pendleton at
Crook County, 3 p.m.
Girls golf: ridgeview invitational, at The Greens at red-
mond, noon.
Tuesday, April 13
Baseball: Bend at Crook County, 4:30 p.m.; ridgeview
at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; The dalles at redmond, 4:30 p.m.;
pleasant hill at la pine, 4:30 p.m.
Softball: Summit at ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.; Crook County
at Bend, 4:30 p.m.; redmond at The dalles, 4:30 p.m.; la
pine at pleasant hill, 4:30 p.m.; Culver at Gervais, 4 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Boston
6
3
.667
_
Baltimore
4
5
.444
2
new york
4
5
.444
2
Tampa Bay
4
5
.444
2
Toronto
4
5
.444
2
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Cleveland
5
3
.625
_
Kansas City
4
3
.571
½
Minnesota
5
4
.556
½
Chicago
4
5
.444
1½
detroit
3
6
.333
2½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
houston
6
3
.667
_
los angeles
6
3
.667
_
Seattle
5
4
.556
1
Texas
3
6
.333
3
oakland
3
7
.300
3½
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
phila.
6
3
.667
_
atlanta
4
5
.444
2
new york
2
3
.400
2
Miami
2
6
.250
3½
Washington
1
5
.167
3½
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Cincinnati
6
3
.667
_
Milwaukee
5
4
.556
1
St. louis
5
4
.556
1
Chicago
4
5
.444
2
pittsburgh
3
6
.333
3
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
los angeles
8
2
.800
_
San diego
7
3
.700
1
San Francisco
6
3
.667
1½
arizona
4
6
.400
4
Colorado
3
7
.300
5
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Cleveland 5, detroit 2
Boston 14, Baltimore 9
n.y. yankees 8, Tampa Bay 4, 10 innings
Seattle 8, Minnesota 6
San diego 2, Texas 0
Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 3, 10 innings
l.a. angels at Toronto, ppd.
Monday’s Games
Boston (pérez 0-0) at Minnesota (happ 0-0), 11:10 a.m.
Seattle (Sheffield 0-1) at Baltimore (Kremer 0-1),
4:05 p.m.
n.y. yankees (Cole 1-0) at Toronto (ray 0-0), 4:07 p.m.
Texas (dunning 1-0) at Tampa Bay (Glasnow 0-0),
4:10 p.m.
Cleveland (McKenzie 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (rodón
1-0), 5:10 p.m.
detroit (Mize 0-0) at houston (Greinke 1-0), 5:10 p.m.
l.a. angels (Cobb 0-0) at Kansas City (Singer 0-1),
5:10 p.m.
oakland (Bassitt 0-2) at arizona (Bumgarner 0-1),
6:40 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Boston at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m.
oakland at arizona, 12:40 p.m.
Seattle at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m.
n.y. yankees at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.
Texas at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m.
detroit at houston, 5:10 p.m.
l.a. angels at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
pittsburgh 7, Chicago Cubs 1
Milwaukee 9, St. louis 3
San diego 2, Texas 0
l.a. dodgers 3, Washington 0
arizona 7, Cincinnati 0
San Francisco 4, Colorado 0
phila. 7, atlanta 6
Miami at n.y. Mets, sus.
Monday’s Games
San diego (darvish 0-0) at pittsburgh (Cahill 0-1),
3:35 p.m.
phila. (anderson 0-1) at n.y. Mets (peterson 0-1),
4:10 p.m.
Miami (alcantara 0-1) at atlanta (ynoa 0-0), 4:20 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (alzolay 0-1) at Milwaukee (peralta 1-0),
4:40 p.m.
Washington (Fedde 0-1) at St. louis (Gant 0-0),
4:45 p.m.
oakland (Bassitt 0-2) at arizona (Bumgarner 0-1),
6:40 p.m.
Cincinnati (Miley 1-0) at San Francisco (Sanchez 0-0),
6:45 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
oakland at arizona, 12:40 p.m.
San diego at pittsburgh, 3:35 p.m.
phila. at n.y. Mets, 4:10 p.m.
Miami at atlanta, 4:20 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 4:40 p.m.
Washington at St. louis, 4:45 p.m.
Cincinnati at San Francisco, 6:45 p.m.
Colorado at l.a. dodgers, 7:10 p.m.
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Washington 42 27 11 4 58 146 126
n.y. islanders 42 27 11 4 58 125 98
pittsburgh
42 27 13 2 56 146 118
Boston
39 21 12 6 48 109 104
n.y. rangers 41 19 16 6 44 133 112
philadelphia 41 19 16 6 44 122 148
new Jersey
40 14 20 6 34 103 132
Buffalo
41 10 25 6 26 98 144
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Carolina
40 27 9 4 58 132 99
Tampa Bay
41 28 11 2 58 141 101
Florida
42 26 12 4 56 133 115
nashville
43 23 19 1 47 112 121
Chicago
42 19 18 5 43 118 132
dallas
40 15 14 11 41 111 104
Columbus
43 15 20 8 38 109 141
detroit
43 14 23 6 34 96 139
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Colorado
41 28 9 4 60 146 96
Vegas
40 27 11 2 56 128 92
Minnesota
40 24 13 3 51 119 109
St. louis
41 19 16 6 44 119 128
arizona
42 19 18 5 43 114 130
San Jose
40 18 18 4 40 113 133
los angeles 40 16 18 6 38 110 117
anaheim
42 12 23 7 31 93 137
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
41 28 10 3 59 139 105
Winnipeg
41 25 13 3 53 134 109
edmonton
42 25 15 2 52 134 120
Montreal
38 17 12 9 43 118 108
Calgary
41 17 21 3 37 108 124
Vancouver
37 16 18 3 35 100 120
ottawa
42 13 25 4 30 112 159
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
Buffalo 5, philadelphia 3
Vegas 1, arizona 0
Colorado 4, anaheim 1
n.y. islanders 3, n.y. rangers 2, oT
pittsburgh 5, new Jersey 2
Washington 8, Boston 1
nashville 3, dallas 2, So
Monday’s Games
Chicago at Columbus, 4 p.m.
detroit at Carolina, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Montreal, 4 p.m.
Winnipeg at ottawa, 4 p.m.
St. louis at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
arizona at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Vegas at los angeles, 7 p.m.
anaheim at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Buffalo at Boston, 4 p.m.
n.y. rangers at new Jersey, 4 p.m.
philadelphia at pittsburgh, ppd
philadelphia at Washington, 4 p.m.
Calgary at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at nashville, 5 p.m.
Florida at dallas, 5:30 p.m.
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
l
pct
phila.
36
17
.679
Brooklyn
36
17
.679
Milwaukee
33
20
.623
atlanta
29
25
.537
Boston
28
26
.519
Charlotte
27
25
.519
Miami
27
25
.519
new york
27
27
.500
indiana
25
27
.481
Chicago
22
30
.423
Toronto
21
33
.389
Washington
19
33
.365
Cleveland
19
34
.358
orlando
17
36
.321
detroit
16
37
.302
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
l
pct
utah
40
13
.755
phoenix
37
15
.712
l.a. Clippers
36
18
.667
denver
34
19
.642
l.a. lakers
33
20
.623
portland
31
21
.596
dallas
29
23
.558
Memphis
26
25
.510
San antonio
25
26
.490
Golden State
25
28
.472
new orleans
24
29
.453
Sacramento
22
31
.415
oklahoma City
20
33
.377
houston
14
39
.264
Minnesota
14
40
.259
Sunday’s Games
atlanta 105, Charlotte 101
Boston 105, denver 87
Milwaukee 124, orlando 87
new orleans 116, Cleveland 109
indiana 132, Memphis 125
San antonio 119, dallas 117
Minnesota 121, Chicago 117
new york 102, Toronto 96
detroit at l.a. Clippers, late
Miami at portland, late
Monday’s Games
l.a. lakers at new york, 4:30 p.m.
phila. at dallas, 4:30 p.m.
Brooklyn at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
San antonio at orlando, 5 p.m.
Chicago at Memphis, 6 p.m.
Sacramento at new orleans, 6 p.m.
Washington at utah, 6 p.m.
denver at Golden State, 7 p.m.
houston at phoenix, 7 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
atlanta at Toronto, 4:30 p.m.
l.a. Clippers at indiana, 4:30 p.m.
l.a. lakers at Charlotte, 5 p.m.
oklahoma City at utah, 6 p.m.
Boston at portland, 7 p.m.
Miami at phoenix, 7 p.m.
Saturday’s Late Box Score
GB
—
—
3
7½
8½
8½
8½
9½
10½
13½
15½
16½
17
19
20
GB
—
2½
4½
6
7
8½
10½
13
14
15
16
18
20
26
26½
Portland 118, Detroit 103
DETROIT (103)
Bey 6-14 0-0 14, J.Jackson 7-12 2-4 21, plumlee 4-8 0-0
8, Joseph 2-7 0-1 4, Smith Jr. 1-5 2-2 4, Cook 0-0 0-0 0,
doumbouya 4-9 3-3 11, okafor 2-2 2-2 6, Stewart 1-5
2-4 4, diallo 3-7 2-2 8, F.Jackson 6-9 3-4 17, hayes 0-3
2-2 2, lee 1-2 2-4 4. Totals 37-83 20-28 103.
PORTLAND (118)
Covington 1-3 0-0 3, powell 2-10 4-4 9, Kanter 9-16 6-8
24, lillard 9-20 5-6 27, McCollum 11-21 1-1 26, anthony
4-9 1-1 11, hollis-Jefferson 0-1 1-2 1, Jones Jr. 2-3 0-0
5, Giles iii 0-0 1-2 1, elleby 0-1 0-0 0, little 5-5 0-0 11,
Simons 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 43-90 19-24 118.
Detroit
23 27 26 27 — 103
Portland
33 26 36 23 — 118
3-Point Goals—detroit 9-26 (J.Jackson 5-6, F.Jackson
2-5, Bey 2-8, doumbouya 0-2, Smith Jr. 0-3), portland
13-29 (lillard 4-8, McCollum 3-8, anthony 2-3, Coving-
ton 1-2, powell 1-5). Fouled Out—none. Rebounds—
detroit 38 (Bey, plumlee 6), portland 49 (Kanter 30).
Assists—detroit 25 (Joseph 8), portland 18 (lillard 10).
Total Fouls—detroit 23, portland 20. A—0 (19,393)
Masters
Continued from A5
All that mattered was that
uphill walk to the 18th green,
needing only to blast out of the
bunker and take two putts for
the victory.
And that’s what he did, soak-
ing in the moment with a few
thousand spectators on their
feat to celebrate a career-chang-
ing moment — for the 29-year-
old Matsuyama, and he hopes
for an entire country.
“Hopefully, I’ll be a pioneer
and many other Japanese will
follow,” Matsuyama said.
Will Zalatoris, the 24-year-ld
Masters rookie, holed an 18-
foot par putt on the last hole
for a 70 and was runner-up. It
was the best performance by a
first-timer to the Masters since
another Dallas kid, Jordan Spi-
eth, was runner-up in 2014 to
Bubba Watson.
Spieth had a few fleeting
thoughts of coming from six
shots behind except for too
many missed putts early and
missed opportunities late. He
bogeyed his last hole for a 70
and tied for third with Schauf-
fele, who shot a 72 with a triple
bogey and a double bogey on
his card.
Matsuyama finished at
10-under 278 for his 15th vic-
tory worldwide, and his sixth
on the PGA Tour.
He becomes the second man
from an Asian country to win
a major. Y.E. Yang of South Ko-
rea won the 2009 PGA Cham-
pionship at Hazeltine over Ti-
ger Woods.
Returning to the 18th green
for the trophy presentation, he
again put on the green jacket
Charlie Riedel/AP
Xander Schauffele bites his club after taking his second tee shot on the
16th hole during the final round of the Masters golf tournament on
Sunday in Augusta, Georgia. His first tee shot went into the water.
and raised both arms in tri-
umph. Augusta National al-
lowed limited spectators, be-
lieved to be about 8,000 a day,
and most might have remem-
bered him from a decade ago.
He won the Asia-Pacific
Amateur to earn an invitation
to the Masters, and he was low
amateur — tied with defend-
ing champion Phil Mickelson
that year — to earn a trip into
famed Butler Cabin. He won in
Japan as an amateur, and four
times after he graduated college
and turned pro. His first PGA
Tour victory was at the Memo-
rial in 2014, prompting tour-
nament host Jack Nicklaus to
say, “I think you’ve just seen the
start of what’s going to be truly
one of your world’s great play-
ers over the next 10 to 15 years.”
That moment came Sunday.
Matsuyama is not big on
emotion, and he speaks even
less even when cornered after
every round by the large con-
tingent of Japanese media.
Most of the media was
absent this year due to
HOCKEY
Prep Sports
BASKETBALL
TUESDAY
BASEBALL
MLB, Oakland Athletics at Arizona Diamondbacks
MLB, Philadelphia Phillies at New York Mets
MLB, Seattle Mariners at Baltimore Orioles
College, Florida State at Florida
BASKETBALL
NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at Indiana Pacers
NBA, Boston Celtics at Portland Trail Blazers
ON DECK
COVID-19 travel restrictions,
and Matsuyama had said on
the eve of the final round that it
has been a lot less stress.
There was plenty on the golf
course, right from the start.
Matsuyama sent his opening
tee shot into the trees right of
the first fairway. He punched it
under the trees from the pine
straw, hit a soft pitch that rolled
down the slope away from the
pin and was happy to leave with
bogey. Two groups ahead of
him, Zalatoris opened with two
straight birdies.
Just like that, the lead was
down to one.
No one got any closer un-
til the final hour. Matsuyama
made birdie from the front
bunker on the par-5 second
hole. He didn’t make another
birdie until the par-5 eighth,
and it didn’t matter because no
one could put any pressure on
him.
Zalatoris misjudged the
speed on No. 3 and three-
putted for bogey from just off
the back of the green. Schauf-
fele was within three of the lead
going to the third hole, only
to go bogey-bogey-double bo-
gey on the toughest three-hole
stretch on the course.
Matsuyama delivered what
appeared to be a knockout
punch with a nifty up-and-
down from right of the green
on the eighth for a tap-in
birdie, and a lob wedge to the
dangerous left pin on the ninth
that rolled out to 3 feet. That
sent him to the back nine with
a five-shot lead.
For the longest time, it
looked as though Matsuyama
couldn’t wait to get to Butler
Cabin and see how he looked
in green.
Schauffele, however,
rammed in a 20-foot birdie putt
from behind the 12th green.
He two-putted from 10 feet
for birdie on No. 13. He nearly
holed out from the fairway for
a tap-in birdie on the 14th. And
with he nearly holed his green-
side bunker shot on the par-5
15th for a fourth straight birdie.
And then all that that
worked ended when his ball
disappeared below the surface
of the pond.
Matsuyama could afford a
few bogeys, and all that affected
was the final margin. He is the
Masters champion, a major
that defines his elite status in
the game and gives Japan the
biggest week it has ever had in
April. The week started a week
ago Saturday when Tsubasa Ka-
jitani won the second Augusta
National Women’s Amateur.
Matsuyama wasn’t around
to see it, but he was well aware
of it. All he wanted was to fol-
low her path and made Japan
proud. His play spoke volumes.
ryan palmer
Martin laird
henrik Stenson
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Gary Woodland
Sebastian Munoz
Mackenzie hughes
Joaquin niemann
Bernd Wiesberger
Brendon Todd
Bryson deChambeau
Tommy Fleetwood
Jason Kokrak
Jose Maria olazabal
Billy horschel
Francesco Molinari
Jim herman
adam Scott
74-68-73-75
74-71-72-74
73-71-71-76
70-76-74-72
73-72-75-72
74-73-71-74
72-72-72-76
75-71-70-76
74-66-74-78
73-71-76-73
76-67-75-75
74-70-73-76
71-76-71-77
75-71-75-75
76-71-73-76
74-73-69-81
76-70-76-76
74-73-79-73
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
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—
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—
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—
290
291
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292
292
292
292
292
292
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293
293
295
296
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297
298
299
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR Cup Series
Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500 Results
Saturday at Martinsville Speedway,
Ridgeway, Virginia
Lap length: 0.53 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (7) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 500 laps, 56 points.
2. (5) Chase elliott, Chevrolet, 500, 49.
3. (2) denny hamlin, Toyota, 500, 52.
4. (3) William Byron, Chevrolet, 500, 42.
5. (19) Kyle larson, Chevrolet, 500, 38.
6. (1) Joey logano, Ford, 500, 33.
7. (23) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 500, 31.
8. (13) Tyler reddick, Chevrolet, 500, 32.
9. (9) Kevin harvick, Ford, 500, 28.
10. (12) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 500, 29.
11. (4) ryan Blaney, Ford, 500, 46.
12. (22) Matt diBenedetto, Ford, 500, 25.
13. (15) Chris Buescher, Ford, 500, 24.
14. (18) austin dillon, Chevrolet, 500, 23.
15. (6) ricky Stenhouse Jr, Chevrolet, 500, 22.
16. (25) Bubba Wallace, Toyota, 500, 21.
17. (27) ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 500, 20.
18. (26) Cole Custer, Ford, 500, 19.
19. (8) ryan newman, Ford, 499, 18.
20. (31) aric almirola, Ford, 499, 17.
21. (21) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 498, 17.
22. (37) James davison, Chevrolet, 494, 15.
23. (33) Josh Bilicki, Ford, 493, 14.
24. (29) Quin houff, Chevrolet, 493, 13.
25. (28) JJ yeley, Chevrolet, 492, 0.
26. (35) anthony alfredo, Ford, 492, 11.
27. (24) Chase Briscoe, Ford, 491, 10.
28. (32) Cody Ware, Chevrolet, 490, 0.
29. (36) BJ Mcleod, Ford, 478, 0.
30. (16) erik Jones, Chevrolet, reargear, 403, 7.
31. (14) Michael Mcdowell, Ford, accident, 387, 6.
32. (11) daniel Suarez, Chevrolet, accident, 386, 5.
33. (10) Brad Keselowski, Ford, accident, 385, 12.
34. (20) alex Bowman, Chevrolet, accident, 384, 13.
35. (30) Justin haley, Chevrolet, accident, 383, 0.
36. (17) ryan preece, Chevrolet, accident, 382, 1.
37. (34) Corey lajoie, Chevrolet, accident, 374, 1.
DEALS
GOLF
Sunday’s Transactions
PGA Tour
Major League Baseball
American League
BoSTon red SoX — reinstated oF/dh J.d. Martinez
from the CoVid-19 il. optioned inF Michael Chavis to
the alternate training site.
deTroiT TiGerS — placed inF/dh Miguel Cabrera on
the 10-day il. Selected the contract of inF renato nunez
to the major league roster. placed rhp Julio Teheran on
the 60-day il.
neW yorK yanKeeS — recalled rhp albert abreu from
the alternate training site. Traded inF Thairo estrada to San
Francisco in exchange for cash considerations. optioned
rhp domingo German to the alternate training site.
TaMpa Bay rayS — placed rhp Chris archer on the 10-
day il. recalled Brent honeywell Jr. from the alternate
training site.
National League
MiaMi MarlinS — recalled lhp daniel Castano from the
alternate training site. optioned oF lewis Brinson to the
alternate training site.
philadelphia phillieS — placed rhp archie Bradley
on the 10-day il. recalled lhp Jojo romero from lehigh
Valley (Triple-a east).
ST. louiS CardinalS — placed oF Tyler o’neill on the 10-
day il. recalled rhp Johan oviedo and oF lane Thomas
from the alternate training site. optioned rhp Jake Wood-
ford to the alternate training site.
San FranCiSCo GianTS — recalled rF Jaylin davis from
richmond (double-a northeast). placed rF Jaylin davis
on the 60-day il. placed rhp reyes Moronta on the 10-
day il. recalled oF laMonte Wade Jr. from the alternate
training site.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BuFFalo SaBreS — recalled C arttu ruotsalainen from
the taxi squad.
neW JerSey deVilS — acquired d Jonas Siegenthaler
from Washington in exchange for arizona’s conditional
third-round pick.
neW yorK iSlanderS — Sent G Ken appleby to Bridge-
port (ahl).
VeGaS Golden KniGhTS — recalled d nicolas hague
from the taxi squad.
The Masters Tournament Scores
Sunday at Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Ga.
Purse: $11.5 million
Yardage: 7,475; Par: 72
Final Round
hideki Matsuyama
69-71-65-73 — 278
Will Zalatoris
70-68-71-70 — 279
Jordan Spieth
71-68-72-70 — 281
Xander Schauffele
72-69-68-72 — 281
Jon rahm
72-72-72-66 — 282
Marc leishman
72-67-70-73 — 282
Justin rose
65-72-72-74 — 283
patrick reed
70-75-70-69 — 284
Corey Conners
73-69-68-74 — 284
Cameron Smith
74-68-73-70 — 285
Tony Finau
74-66-73-72 — 285
Webb Simpson
70-76-70-70 — 286
Stewart Cink
74-69-72-71 — 286
Kevin na
75-70-70-71 — 286
Si Woo Kim
71-69-74-72 — 286
robert Macintyre
74-70-70-72 — 286
Brian harman
69-69-74-74 — 286
Tyrrell hatton
71-74-74-68 — 287
Collin Morikawa
73-69-75-70 — 287
Scottie Scheffler
73-72-71-71 — 287
harris english
74-71-73-70 — 288
Shane lowry
71-73-72-72 — 288
phil Mickelson
75-72-69-72 — 288
Justin Thomas
73-67-75-73 — 288
Viktor hovland
73-70-72-73 — 288
paul Casey
73-74-73-69 — 289
abraham ancer
75-69-75-70 — 289
ian poulter
74-73-72-70 — 289
louis oosthuizen
76-70-72-71 — 289
Cameron Champ
72-68-77-72 — 289
Matt Jones
74-69-74-72 — 289
Bubba Watson
74-70-73-72 — 289
Charl Schwartzel
74-71-72-72 — 289
Michael Thompson
72-72-75-71 — 290
Matt Fitzpatrick
74-70-73-73 — 290
Matt Wallace
74-72-71-73 — 290
Zalatoris’ Masters debut
ends just a shot back
BY TIM REYNOLDS
Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Maybe
the first hint that Will Zala-
toris had what it took came
when he was 6, and Ken
Venturi went over to him on
a driving range to show him
a grip that he hasn’t changed
since. Or maybe it was at 11,
when a pro named David
Price said he could be great if
he put in the work.
Or maybe it was Sunday,
when the 24-year-old fin-
ished alone in second at the
Masters.
Either way, the secret is out
now. A skinny kid with mop-
top blonde hair and an un-
flappable sense of California
cool finished only one shot
behind Hideki Matsuyama
at Augusta National, his final
round of 2-under 70 getting
him to 9 under for the week
and into the spotlight for as
long as he wants.
“I’ve wanted to be in this
position my entire life,” Zala-
toris said. “I don’t need to
shy away from it now. I’ve
made it this far. Why now be
timid? I thought I did a really
good job of enjoying the mo-
ment but not letting it get to
me, too.”
Zalatoris says he’s watched
Sunday at the Masters 24
times, which is probably no
more than a slight under-
statement. First, while it is
possible that he watched the
1997 final round when Tiger
Matt Slocum/AP
Will Zalatoris tips his cap after
the final round of the Masters
on Sunday in Augusta, Georgia.
Woods won the first of his
five green jackets, it should
be noted that Zalatoris was
about 8 months old when
that happened. And he didn’t
watch this year’s final round
because, well, he was playing
instead.
But let these numbers
illustrate how much his
life has changed, and how
quickly it happened: In April
2019, he finished 61st in
an event called the Dormie
Network Classic and earned
$1,408. In April 2021, he fin-
ished second at the Masters
and earned $1,242,000.
“I just took as many men-
tal images in my mind, be-
cause I’ve watched this tour-
nament for as long as I can
remember,” Zalatoris said.
“And the fact that I was a
part of it is pretty special, and
the fact that I contended is
even cooler.”