D6 EZ M2 THE WASHINGTON POST.TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 , 2022
SCOREBOARD
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC WLPct GB
Philadelphia................................. 35 23 .603 —
Boston.......................................... 34 26 .567 2
Toronto........................................ 32 25 .561 21 / 2
Brooklyn....................................... 31 28 .525 41 / 2
New York...................................... 25 34 .424 101 / 2
SOUTHEAST WLPct GB
Miami........................................... 38 21 .644 —
Atlanta......................................... 28 30 .483 91 / 2
Charlotte...................................... 29 31 .483 91 / 2
Washington................................. 27 31 .466 101 / 2
Orlando......................................... 13 47 .217 251 / 2
CENTRAL WLPct GB
Chicago......................................... 38 21 .644 —
Cleveland...................................... 35 23 .603 21 / 2
Milwaukee................................... 36 24 .600 21 / 2
Indiana......................................... 20 40 .333 181 / 2
Detroit.......................................... 13 45 .224 241 / 2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
SOUTHWEST WLPct GB
Memphis...................................... 41 19 .683 —
Dallas........................................... 35 24 .593 51 / 2
San Antonio................................. 23 36 .390 171 / 2
New Orleans................................ 23 36 .390 171 / 2
Houston........................................ 15 43 .259 25
NORTHWEST WLPct GB
Utah.............................................. 36 22 .621 —
Denver.......................................... 33 25 .569 3
Minnesota.................................... 31 28 .525 51 / 2
Portland....................................... 25 34 .424 111 / 2
Oklahoma City.............................. 18 40 .310 18
PACIFIC WLPct GB
Phoenix........................................ 48 10 .828 —
Golden State................................ 42 17 .712 61 / 2
L.A. Clippers................................. 30 31 .492 191 / 2
L.A. Lakers................................... 27 31 .466 21
Sacramento.................................. 22 38 .367 27
SUNDAY’S RESULT
All-Star Game: Team LeBron 163, T eam Durant 160
MONDAY’S RESULTS
No games scheduled.
TUESDAY’S GAMES
No games scheduled.
WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
No games scheduled.
THURSDAY’S GAMES
Cleveland at Detroit, 7
Boston at Brooklyn, 7:30
Atlanta at Chicago, 8
Memphis at Minnesota, 8
Phoenix at Oklahoma City, 8
Golden State at Portland, 10
Denver at Sacramento, 10
Bruins 5, Avalanche 1
COLORADO .............................. 0 10 —1
BOSTON ................................... 1 31 —5
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Boston, Pastrnak 26 (McAvoy, Bergeron),
17:30.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Boston, Bergeron 13 (Hall, Grzelcyk), 8:01. 3,
Colorado, MacKinnon 12 (Makar, Rantanen), 12:58 (pp).
4, Boston, Pastrnak 27 (Carlo, Hall), 14:35. 5, Boston,
DeBrusk 9 (Lazar, McAvoy), 15:42.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 6, Boston, Coyle 12 (Hall, Pastrnak), 4:04 (pp).
SHOTS ON GOAL
COLORADO .............................. 9 11 9— 29
BOSTON ................................. 21159 —45
Power-play opportunities: Colorado 1 of 4; Boston 1 of 3.
Goalies: Colorado, Kuemper 25-6-2 (45 shots-40 saves).
Boston, Swayman 11-7-3 (29-28). A: 17,850 (17,565). T:
2:32.
NCAA women
EAST
Binghamton 63, Hartford 46
Marist 70, Rider 62
NJIT 58, Massachusetts Lowell 51
St. Peter’s 78, Monmouth (N.J.) 66
SOUTH
Alabama A&M 68, Florida A&M 57
Charlotte 53, FIU 41
High Point 58, Winthrop 42
Howard 70, Coppin State 67
Maryland Eastern Shore 77, North Carolina Central 64
Morgan State 51, Norfolk State 48
Rice 60, UAB 55
South Carolina State 64, Delaware State 52
MIDWEST
Ball State 73, W. Michigan 67
Bowling Green 77, Kent State 67
Iowa 88, Indiana 82
Milwaukee 50, Green Bay 48
Ohio 69, Akron 66
Penn State 79, Michigan State 71
SOUTHWEST
Texas Southern 84, Arkansas Pine Bluff 67
WEST
Gonzaga 74, Santa Clara 58
Portland 89, Saint Mary’s (Calif.) 84
WTA
QATAR OPEN
At Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex
In Doha, Qatar
Purse: $2,632,448
Surface: Hardcourt outdoor
SINGLES — R OUND OF 64
Jelena Ostapenko (15), Latvia, def. Oceane Dodin,
France, 6-4, 6-2; Tereza Martincova, Czech Republic, def.
Elina Svitolina (10), Ukraine, 6-7 (7-2), 7-5, 7-6 (7-5);
Viktorija Golubic, Switzerland, def. Andrea Petkovic,
Germany, 6-4, 6-4; Magda Linette, Poland, def. Alison
Riske, United States, 2-6, 7-6 (7-5), 6-1; Caroline Garcia,
France, def. Simona Halep, Romania, 6-4, 6-3; Coco Gauff
(14), United States, def. Shelby Rogers, United States,
6-2, 6-3; Petra Kvitova, Czech Republic, def. Irina-Came-
lia Begu, Romania, 6-3, 6-1; Daria Kasatkina, Russia, def.
Ajla Tomljanovic, Australia, 6-4, 6-7 (7-4), 6-2; Elise
Mertens (16), Belgium, def. Jasmine Paolini, Italy, 6-3,
2-6, 7-5; Jil Teichmann, Switzerland, def. Angelique
Kerber (13), Germany, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2; Jaqueline Adina
Cristian, Romania, def. Elena Rybakina (11), Kazakh-
stan, 6-4, 6-3; Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, def. Veronika
Kudermetova, Russia, 7-6 (7-5), 6-4.
SINGLES — R OUND OF 32
Garbine Muguruza (5), Spain, def. Sorana Cirstea,
Romania, 7-6 (7-4), 6-1; Anett Kontaveit (4), Estonia,
def. Ana Konjuh, Croatia, 6-2, 6-3.
DOUBLES — ROUND OF 32
Desirae Krawczyk, United States, and Ellen Perez, Aus-
tralia, def. Oksana Kalashnikova, Georgia, and Maryna
Zanevska, Belgium, 6-3, 6-2; Alicja Rosolska, Poland, and
Erin Routliffe, New Zealand, def. Kamilla Rakhimova,
Russia, and Clara Tauson, Denmark, 5-7, 6-2, 10-7;
Jessica Pegula and Coco Gauff, United States, def.
Lyudmyla Kichenok, Ukraine, and Jelena Ostapenko (6),
Latvia, 6-3, 6-2; Beatriz Haddad Maia, Brazil, and Anna
Danilina (8), Kazakhstan, def. Samantha Murray Sharan,
Britain, and Bibiane Schoofs, Netherlands, 6-0, 6-4;
Kirsten Flipkens and Alison van Uytvanck, Belgium, def.
Emily Webley-Smith, Britain, and Mirjam Bjorklund,
Sweden, 6-3, 6-3; Aliaksandra Sasnovich, Belarus, and
Marta Kostyuk, Ukraine, def. Kristina Kucova, Slovakia,
and Irina Bara, Romania, 7-6 (7-3), 6-2; Sania Mirza, India,
and Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, def. Vera Zvonareva,
Russia, and Monica Niculescu, Romania, 6-4, 6-3.
ABIERTO AKRON ZAPOPAN
At Panamerican Tennis Center; In Guadalajara, Mexico
Purse: $262,727
Surface: Hardcourt outdoor
SINGLES — R OUND OF 32
Anastasia Potapova, Russia, def. Lesia Tsurenko,
Ukraine, 6-4, 2-2, ret; Anna-Karolina Schmiedlova,
Slovakia, def. Nuria Parrizas Diaz (5), Spain, 6-1, 6-4;
Anna Kalinskaya, Russia, def. Qinwen Zheng (8), China,
6-3, 2-6, 6-2; Wang Qiang, China, def. Lauren Davis,
United States, 6-2, 6-1; Sloane Stephens (6), United
States, def. Brenda Fruhvirtova, Czech Republic, 6-2,
6-2; Lucia Bronzetti, Italy, def. Caty McNally, United
States, 6-7 (7-5), 6-3, 6-3; Harmony Tan, France, def.
Madison Keys (2), United States, 6-4, 1-6, 6-1.
DOUBLES — ROUND OF 16
Paula Kania-Chodun, Poland, and Nao Hibino, Japan, def.
Camilo Osorio, Colombia, and Panna Udvardy, Hungary,
2-6, 7-5, 10-5; Peangtarn Plipuech, Thailand, and Aldila
Sutjiadi, Indonesia, def. Laura Pigossi, Brazil, and Renata
Zarazua, Mexico, 6-4, 4-6, 10-7; Elixane Lechemia, France,
and Ingrid Neel (1), United States, def. Eden Silva,
Britain, and Kimberley Zimmermann, Belgium, 6-2, 7-5.
TENNIS
ATP
DUBAI TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS
At Dubai Tennis Stadium
In Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Purse: $2,794,840
Surface: Hardcourt outdoor
SINGLES — R OUND OF 32
Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, def. Marin Cilic, Croatia, 6-4,
7-6 (7-3); Filip Krajinovic, Serbia, def. Malek Jaziri,
Tunisia, 6-7 (7-4), 6-2, 6-4; Taro Daniel, Japan, def. David
Goffin, Belgium, 6-3, 7-6 (7-5); Andy Murray, Britain, def.
Christopher O’Connell, Australia, 6-7 (7-4), 6-3, 7-5; Novak
Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Lorenzo Musetti, Italy, 6-3, 6-3.
DOUBLES — R OUND OF 16
Hubert Hurkacz, Poland, and Jannik Sinner, Italy, def. A ltug
Celikbilek, Turkey, and Alexander Bublik, Kazakhstan, 7-6
(8-6), 6-4; Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen, Belgium, def.
Daniel Evans and Ken Skupski, Britain, 6-4, 7-5.
CHILE OPEN
At Club Deportivo Universidad Catolica
In Santiago, Chile
Purse: $475,960
Surface: Red clay
SINGLES — R OUND OF 32
Juan Ignacio Londero, Argentina, def. Tomas Martin
Etcheverry, Argentina, 4-6, 6-4, 7-5; Facundo Bagnis (8),
Argentina, def. Bernabe Zapata Miralles, Spain, 6-3, 6-0;
Thiago Seyboth Wild, Brazil, def. Nicolas Kicker, Argen-
tina, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4; Thiago Monteiro, Brazil, def. Nicolas
Jarry, Chile, 7-6 (11-9), 6-4.
DOUBLES — R OUND OF 16
Nikola Milojevic, Serbia, and Zdenek Kolar, Czech Republic,
def. Gonzalo L ama and A lejandro T abilo, Chile, 6-4, 1-6, 10-7.
AUTO RACING
NASCAR Cup Series
SCHEDULE-WINNERS
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Heat Race 1 (Kyle Busch)
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Heat Race 2 (Tyler
Reddick)
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Heat Race 3 (Justin
Haley)
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Heat Race 4 (Joey
Logano)
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Last Chance Qualifying
Race 1 (Denny Hamlin)
Feb. 6: x-Clash at the Coliseum Last Chance Qualifying
Race 2, (Ryan Preece)
Feb. 6: Clash at the Coliseum (Joey Logano)
Feb. 17: x-Duel 1 at Daytona (Brad Keselowski)
Feb. 17: x-Duel 2 at Daytona (Chris Buescher)
Feb. 20: Daytona 500 (Austin Cindric)
Feb. 27: Wise Power 400, Fontana, Calif.
March 6: Pennzoil 400, Las Vegas
March 13: Ruoff Mortgage 500k, Avondale, Ariz.
March 20: QuikTrip 500, Hampton, Ga.
March 27: Texas Grand Prix, Austin
April 3: Toyota Owners 400, Richmond
April 9: Maximum Pain Relief 400, Ridgeway, Va.
April 17: D irt Race, Bristol, Tenn.
April 24: Geico 500, Talladega, Ala.
May 1: Drydene 400, Dover, Del.
May 8: Goodyear 400, Darlington, S.C.
May 15: NASCAR Cup Series at Kansas, Kansas City,
Kan.
May 22: x-NASCAR All-Star Open, Fort Worth
May 22: NASCAR All-Star Race, Fort Worth
May 29: Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
June 5: NASCAR Cup Series R ace at Gateway, Madison, Ill.
June 12: Toyota/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif.
June 26: Ally 400, Lebanon, Tenn.
July 3: Kwik Trip 250, Elkhart Lake, Wis.
July 10: Quaker State 400, Hampton, Ga.
July 17: Ambetter 301, Loudon, N.H.
July 24: Explore the Pocono M ountains 3 50, Long Pond, Pa.
July 31: Verizon 200 at the Brickyard, Speedway, Ind.
Aug. 7: FireKeepers Casino 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 14: Federated Auto Parts 400, Richmond
Aug. 21: Go Bowling at the Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 27: Coke Zero Sugar 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Sept. 4: Southern 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 11: Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas City, Kan.
Sept. 17: Night Race, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. 25: A utomotive 500, Fort Worth
Oct. 2: YellaWood 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 9: Roval 400, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 16: South Point 400, Las Vegas
Oct. 23: Dixie Vodka 400, Homestead, Fla.
Oct. 30: Xfinity 500, Ridgeway, Va.
Nov. 6: NASCAR C up Series C hampionship, Avondale, Ariz.
x-Non-points race
Hurricanes 4, Flyers 3 (OT)
CAROLINA ......................... 0 211 —4
PHILADELPHIA .................. 0 120 —3
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Carolina, Niederreiter 15 (Slavin, Fast), 0:24.
2, Philadelphia, Mayhew 6 (Braun, Provorov), 0:59. 3,
Carolina, Teravainen 13 (Aho, Svechnikov), 12:13.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 4, Philadelphia, Brown 2 (Ristolainen, Ratc-
liffe), 5:19. 5, Carolina, Trocheck 14 (Cole, Necas), 7:15.
6, Philadelphia, Lindblom 7 (Konecny, Sanheim), 15:07.
OVERTIME
Scoring: 7, Carolina, Pesce 4 (Staal, Trocheck), 4:42.
SHOTS ON GOAL
CAROLINA ......................... 2 13 10 6— 31
PHILADELPHIA ................ 1111145 —41
Power-play opportunities: Carolina 0 of 1; Philadelphia 0
of 3. Goalies: Carolina, Andersen 27-7-2 (41 shots-38
saves). Philadelphia, Jones 6-9-3 (31-27). A: 1 4,591
(19,543). T: 2:41.
NCAA MEN’S
TOP 25 COACHES POLL
The Ferris Mowers Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll, with
team’s records through Sunday in parentheses, total
points based on 25 for first place through one point for
25th, ranking in last week’s poll and first-place votes
received.
RECORD PTS PVS
- Gonzaga (32) 23-2 800 1
- Arizona 24-2 757 4
- Kentucky 22-5 682 3
- Auburn 24-3 669 2
- Kansas 22-4 658 6
- Duke 23-4 652 5
- Purdue 24-4 643 7
- Villanova 21-6 546 10
- Texas Tech 21-6 534 11
- Providence 22-3 511 9
- Baylor 22-5 509 8
- Wisconsin 21-5 434 16
- UCLA 19-5 394 14
- Illinois 19-7 375 12
- Houston 22-4 333 15
- Southern California 23-4 325 17
- Tennessee 19-7 311 13
- Arkansas 21-6 211 24
- Ohio State 16-7 179 18
- Connecticut 19-7 170 24
- Murray State 26-2 163 21
- Texas 19-8 151 20
- Saint Mary's 22-6 75 27
- Michigan State 18-8 72 19
- Alabama 17-10 46 26
Dropped out: No. 22 Wyoming (22-4)
O thers receiving votes: W yoming (22-4) 34, Marquette
(17-10) 31, Wake Forest (21-7) 26, Iowa (18-8) 19, Notre
Dame (19-8) 17, Rutgers (16-10) 17, Boise State (21-6)
12, Creighton (18-8) 12, Colorado State (21-4) 11, SMU
(19-6) 5, Davidson (22-4) 4, San Diego State (17-6) 4,
Miami (Fla.) (19-8) 3, North Texas (20-4) 2, Seton Hall
(16-9) 2, San Francisco (21-7) 1.
New York Racing Association re-
vised its procedures and is trying
again to suspend Baffert. An ad-
ministrative hearing related to
that issue was held last month,
and a final decision is pending.
When the NYRA announced
last year its temporary suspen-
sion of Baffert, it pointed to not
only the unfolding situation in-
volving Medina Spirit but also
“failed drug tests in the recent
past” by others in his care.
A 2021 review by The Washing-
ton Post of racing records found
Baffert-trained horses accounted
for 29 drug violations over 44 years
leading into the Kentucky Derby.
In one case involving his filly Ga-
mine, her positive test for betame-
thasone resulted in the negation of
a third-place finish in the 2020
Kentucky Oaks. Baffert said then
that his staff had followed guide-
lines on how long before race day
to cease administering the sub-
stance, and he complained that the
level detected in Gamine was “a
minuscule amount that would not
affect a 1,000-pound animal,” but
he did not appeal that decision.
for another substance banned
then on race days, and the run-
ner-up, Forward Pass, was award-
ed a victory that wasn’t fully
settled until the owner of Danc-
er’s Image gave up his legal battle
five years later. In 2019, Maxi-
mum Security crossed the finish
line first but was quickly disquali-
fied for interference.
This year’s Kentucky Derby is
set to be staged May 7. The second
leg of the Triple Crown, the Preak-
ness in Baltimore, is scheduled
for May 21, and the third race in
the series, the Belmont Stakes in
New York, is set for June 11.
The executive director of the
Maryland Racing Commission,
Mike Hopkins, said Monday (via
the Baltimore Sun) that his agen-
cy will reciprocate the Kentucky
suspension, should it be upheld
on a possible appeal. In that sce-
nario, Baffert would not be able to
enter horses in the Preakness.
Baffert also faces the possibili-
ty of a suspension in New York,
where a ban on him last year by
the state’s racing association was
halted by a federal judge. The
prevail when the facts and rules
are presented to detached, neu-
tral decisionmakers.”
Monday’s disqualification rep-
resented the third time that has
happened to a Kentucky Derby
winner and the second time for a
doping violation. The winner of
the 1968 race, Dancer’s Image,
was ruled to have tested positive
ment. “This ruling represents an
egregious departure from both the
facts and the law, but the numerous
public statements by KHRC offi-
cials over the last several months
have made perfectly clear that Bob
Baffert’s fate was decided before we
ever sat down for a hearing before
the three stewards....
“We will appeal, and we will
denied it was administered to
Medina Spirit before attributing
the positive result to the use of an
antifungal ointment.
In a statement Monday,
Brewster said, “The unrefuted
and undisputed facts established
at the hearing were: (1) Medina
Spirit was treated with an oint-
ment, not an injection; (2) the
trace amount of betamethasone
detected could not have affected
the horse in any way; and (3) the
trace amount of betamethasone
detected could not possibly have
affected the outcome of the race.”
The three stewards who presid-
ed over the hearing were not
swayed by Brewster’s argument.
They declared that the official or-
der of finish in the race has Man-
daloun in first, followed by Hot
Rod Charlie and Essential Quality.
Bettors who backed Mandaloun to
win continue to have no recourse;
the stewards said parimutuel wa-
gering “is not affected by this rul-
ing.”
“We are disappointed by the
Commission’s ruling, but not sur-
prised,” Brewster said in the state-
the horse’s trainer, Brad Cox.
“Winning the Kentucky Derby
is one of the most exciting
achievements in sports,” the
statement read, “and we look
forward to celebrating Mandal-
oun on a future date in a way that
is fitting of this rare distinction.”
Medina Spirit died suddenly in
December after a workout at San-
ta Anita racetrack in California.
In a statement this month, the
California Horse Racing Board
said a necropsy of Medina Spirit,
who was subsequently cremated,
did not establish a definitive
cause of death.
The KHRC decision came a
week after the commission held a
closed hearing at which an attor-
ney for Baffert, Clark Brewster,
argued Medina Spirit’s dosage of
anti-inflammatory treatment be-
tamethasone did not violate state
rules because of how it was ad-
ministered. In the wake of the
discovery of betamethasone in
the horse’s system after a race-day
test last year, Baffert initially
DERBY FROM D1
Medina Spirit’s D erby title is stripped, and Mandaloun is recognized as winner
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES
Medina Spirit, right, beat Mandaloun at Churchill Downs, but the
Bob Baffert-trained horse tested positive for a banned substance.
Flames 3, Jets 1
WINNIPEG ............................... 0 10 —1
CALGARY ................................. 0 12 —3
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Calgary, Monahan 8 (Hanifin, Mangiapane),
1:07 (pp). 2, Winnipeg, Toninato 5 (Dillon, Pionk), 7:39.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 3, Calgary, Lindholm 23 (Gaudreau), 19:13. 4,
Calgary, Toffoli 11 (Backlund, Coleman), 19:49 (en).
SHOTS ON GOAL
WINNIPEG ............................... 8 78 —23
CALGARY ............................... 11146 —31
Power-play opportunities: Winnipeg 0 of 3; Calgary 1 of
- Goalies: Winnipeg, Hellebuyck 17-18-7 (30 shots-28
saves). Calgary, Markstrom 23-10-5 (23-22). A: 9,639
(19,289). T: 2:22.
HIGH SCHOOLS
BOYS' BASKETBALL
VIRGINIA
F lint Hill 82, Highland 76
Potomac (Va.) 60, John Champe High School 55
W est Potomac 86, Justice 51
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
DISTRICT
S t. John's 74, Archbishop Carroll 34
VIRGINIA
A lexandria City 60, Justice 27
M ount Vernon 53, West Springfield 33
R obinson 65, Annandale 7
PRIVATE
G eorgetown Visitation 72, Virginia Episcopal 30
P aul VI 59, Elizabeth Seton 20
S t. Mary's Ryken 63, O'Connell 52
BOYS' BASKETBALL
VIRGINIA
FLINT HILL 82, HIGHLAND 76
H (3-2)Totals 0 0-0 76.
FH (14-7) Sunderland 24, Coleman 21, Gray 11, Gorman
7, Jones 6, Pabis 3, Kennedy 3, O'Grady 2, Thomas 2
Totals 17 12-14 82.
Halftime: Flint Hill, (50-32).
Three-point goals: F H 12 (Sunderland 2, Pabis 1,
Kennedy 1, Gray 1, Abdullah 1, Gorman 1, Coleman 5).
POTOMAC (VA.) 60,
JOHN CHAMPE HIGH SCHOOL 55
P (14-6) H onore 18, Bethea 11, Lee 10, Harris 7, Mumeka
7, Lewis 5, Johnson 2 Totals 11 23-26 60.
( 0-2)Totals 0 0-0 55.
Halftime: Potomac (Va.), (31-25). Three-point goals: P 5
(Honore 2, Lewis 1, Bethea 1, Mumeka 1)
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
TOP 20
NO. 4 ST. JOHN'S 74, ARCHBISHOP CARROLL 34
AC (6-7)Totals 0 0-0 34.
SJ (13-4) Thomas 29, Harper 15, Walker 9, Boone 9,
Barton 5, Kolb 4, O'Neil 3 Totals 21 5-7 74.
Halftime: St. John's, (48-10). Three-point goals: S J 9
(Walker 2, O'Neil 1, Harper 2, Thomas 3, Barton 1).
NO. 6 GEORGETOWN VISITATION 72,
VIRGINIA EPISCOPAL 30
GV (19-3) Nweke 15, Lewis 14, Tall 10, Alvarado 8, West
8, Rubio 6, McBeth 6, Wu 3, Corbett 2 Totals 23 2-3 72.
VES (0-0)Totals 0 0-0 30.
Halftime: Georgetown Visitation, (47-11).
Three-point goals: G V 8 (Wu 1, Tall 2, Rubio 2, Nweke 3).
NO. 7 PAUL VI 59, ELIZABETH SETON 20
PVI (17-7) Williams 15, Volker 11, Batchelor 9, Kunzwil-
er 5, Kunzwiler 5, Jackson 4, Hastick 4, Holler 2, Eisner 2,
Hamburger 2 Totals 21 5-7 59.
ES (8-12) Smith 4, Johnson 4, Walton 3, Lovelace 2,
James 2, Jackson 2, NuQuay 2, Murphy 1 Totals 1 12-20
20.
Halftime: Paul VI, (25-10). Three-point goals: E S 2 (John-
son 1, Walton 1); PVI 4 (Kunzwiler 1 , Batchelor 2, Volker 1).
NO. 16 ROBINSON 65, ANNANDALE 7
R (23-2) Babcock 8, Davis 8, Simonsen 8, Shimp 8,
Simonsen 6, Huff 6, Williams 6, Byrne 4, Busby 4, Hill 4,
Pham 2, Burton 1 Totals 28 6-18 65.
A (0-3)Totals 0 0-0 7.
Halftime: Robinson, (43-7).
Three-point goals: R 1 (Davis 1).
VIRGINIA
MOUNT VERNON 53, WEST SPRINGFIELD 33
MV (15-9) Turner 14, Lujan-Gonzales 12, Morgan 12,
Lujan-Gonzales 7, Hubbard 5, Duckett 3 Totals 15 14-25
53.
WS (3-7) Rapoza 12, Chasteen 7, Allen 5, Hillery 4,
Berglund 2, Lucero 2, Ndlovu 1 Totals 11 8-17 33.
Halftime: Mount Vernon, (25-13).
Three-point goals: W S 1 (Allen 1); MV 3 (Lujan-Gonzales
1, Lujan-Gonzales 1, Duckett 1)
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NCAA men
EAST
Boston College 71, Florida State 55
Colgate 63, American 49
Coppin State 86, Howard 82
Lafayette 84, Holy Cross 61
Maryland 67, Penn State 61
Morgan State 85, Norfolk State 74
Syracuse 74, Georgia Tech 73 (OT)
SOUTH
Marshall 74, Southern Mississippi 60
Middle Tennessee 77, UTEP 59
North Carolina 70, Louisville 63
MIDWEST
Baylor 66, Oklahoma State 64 (OT)
Ohio State 80, Indiana 69 (OT)
SOUTHWEST
Liberty 85, Central Arkansas 66
TCU 77, West Virginia 67
WEST
UCLA 6 6, Arizona State 52
NCAA MEN’S AP TOP 25 POLL
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college
basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses,
records through Sunday, total points based on 25 points
for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place
vote and previous ranking
RECORD PTS PVS
- Gonzaga (61) 23-2 1525 1
- Arizona 24-2 1461 3
- Auburn 24-3 1313 2
- Purdue 24-4 1299 5
- Kansas 22-4 1297 6
- Kentucky 22-5 1248 4
- Duke 23-4 1146 9
- Villanova 21-6 1071 10
- Texas Tech 21-6 1066 11
- Baylor 22-5 984 7
- Providence 22-3 910 8
- UCLA 19-5 802 13
- Wisconsin 21-5 735 15
- Houston 22-4 734 14
- Illinois 19-7 666 12
- Southern California 23-4 586 17
- Tennessee 19-7 580 16
- Arkansas 21-6 502 23
- Murray State 26-2 371 21
- Texas 19-8 349 20
- Connecticut 19-7 340 24
- Ohio State 16-7 320 18
- Saint Mary's (Calif.) 22-6 148 -
- Alabama 17-10 63 25
- Iowa 18-8 59 -
O thers receiving votes: M ichigan State 58, Rutgers 35,
Wyoming 24, Boise State 22, Davidson 19, San Diego
State 14, South Dakota State 13, LSU 13, Marquette 12,
Wake Forest 11, Colorado State 10, Belmont 5, Notre
Dame 4, SMU 3, Xavier 2, North Texas 2, Wagner 1,
Vermont 1, Creighton 1.
NCAA WOMEN’S AP TOP 25 POLL
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ women’s
college basketball poll, with first-place votes in paren-
theses, records through Sunday, total points based on 25
points for a first-place vote through one point for a
25th-place vote and previous ranking
RECORD PTS PVS
- South Carolina (30) 25-1 750 1
- Stanford 23-3 720 2
- North Carolina State 25-3 688 4
- Louisville 23-3 651 3
- Baylor 21-5 619 7
- Michigan 21-4 596 9
- Connecticut 19-5 517 10
- LSU 23-4 510 11
- Iowa State 22-4 508 6
- Indiana 19-5 485 5
- Texas 19-6 469 14
- Arizona 19-5 429 8
- Maryland 20-7 425 13
- Notre Dame 20-6 288 19
- Florida 20-7 287 17
- Tennessee 21-6 273 12
- Ohio State 20-5 238 18
- North Carolina 21-5 228 24
- BYU 23-2 226 20
- Oklahoma 20-6 212 15
- Iowa 17-7 176 22
- Georgia Tech 19-8 117 16
- Virginia Tech 20-7 106 23
- Florida Gulf Coast 24-2 62 25
- Oregon 18-9 44 -
- Georgia 18-8 44 21
O thers receiving votes: K ansas 39, Princeton 16, UCF 8,
Washington State 6, Villanova 5, Liberty 3, Toledo 2,
UNLV 2, Dayton 1.
Maryland 67, Penn State 61
Penn State ...................................... 283 3— 61
Maryland ......................................... 283 9— 67
PENN STATE MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
Harrar 31 7-10 0-24-13 2314
Lundy 35 2-4 0-0 1-5 036
Dread 20 2-4 0-0 0-3 046
Johnson 24 1-3 0-0 0-0 003
Pickett 40 6-18 0-0 1-6 6013
Sessoms 25 7-14 1-1 0-1 1317
Dorsey 10 0-0 0-0 0-1 000
Cornwall 80 -0 0-0 0-0 020
J.Scott 50 -0 2-2 0-1 012
White 20 -0 0-0 1-1 000
TOTALS 200 25-53 3-57-31 91661
Percentages: FG .472, FT .600. 3-Point Goals: 8-19, .421
(Dread 2-4, Lundy 2-4, Sessoms 2-4, Johnson 1-2,
Pickett 1-5). Team Rebounds: 1. Team Turnovers: None.
Blocked Shots: 2 (Dorsey, Lundy). Turnovers: 13 (Ses-
soms 4, Lundy 3, Pickett 3, Dread 2, Johnson). Steals: 7
(Pickett 4, Dread 2, Johnson). Technical Fouls: None.
MARYLAND MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
D.Scott 33 5-10 2-4 0-3 0112
Wahab 22 3-5 1-1 2-7 017
Green 29 1-4 0-0 2-4 112
Hart 32 3-7 1-1 0-3 018
Russell 29 4-139-11 0-5 2318
Martinez 20 1-1 2-2 0-0 424
Ayala 18 5-8 0-0 0-1 0113
Reese 17 1-2 0-0 0-1 013
TOTALS 200 23-5015-194-24 71167
Percentages: FG .460, FT .789. 3-Point Goals: 6-20, .300
(Ayala 3-6, Reese 1-1, Hart 1-4, Russell 1-4, D.Scott 0-2,
Green 0-3). Team Rebounds: 4. Team Turnovers: None.
Blocked Shots: 2 (D.Scott, Wahab). Turnovers: 9 (Ayala 3,
D.Scott 3, Green, Hart, Russell). Steals: 11 (Hart 4, Martinez
4, Russell 2, Ayala). Technical Fouls: None. A: 15,184 (17,950).
Colgate 63, American 49
American ........................................ 262 3— 49
Colgate ............................................ 313 2— 63
AMERICAN MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
O'Neil 23 2-4 0-0 0-2 106
Rogers 29 2-9 0-0 1-5 304
Beckton 35 5-9 5-8 2-7 1016
Smalls 32 6-12 0-0 0-1 1012
Stephens 35 3-6 0-0 0-3 027
Knotek 17 0-4 0-0 0-4 130
Donadio 13 0-2 0-0 2-3 200
Alexander 61 -1 0-0 0-0 012
Delaney 60 -2 0-2 0-0 010
Ball 21 -1 0-1 0-1 002
Sutton 10 -0 0-0 0-0 000
Whittaker 10 -0 0-0 0-0 000
TOTALS 200 20-505-115-26 9749
Percentages: FG .400, FT .455. 3-Point Goals: 4-13, .308
(O’Neil 2-3, Beckton 1-1, Stephens 1-2, Donadio 0-1,
Smalls 0-2, Knotek 0-4). Team Rebounds: 4. Team
Turnovers: None. Blocked Shots: 4 (O’Neil 2, Knotek,
Rogers). Turnovers: 14 (Smalls 4, Beckton 3, Stephens 3,
Alexander 2, O’Neil 2). Steals: 10 (Donadio 3, Beckton 2,
Stephens 2, O’Neil, Rogers, Smalls). Technical Fouls:
None.
COLGATE MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
Records 24 5-6 1-14-11 2111
Cummings 30 3-12 0-0 1-4 018
Ferguson 30 5-9 0-0 0-5 4115
Richardson 31 5-13 2-2 0-2 4113
Moffatt 31 2-5 1-2 1-1 316
Lynch-Daniels 25 2-5 0-0 1-4 205
Woodward 15 2-5 0-1 1-5 224
Thomson 90 -1 1-2 1-1 221
Light 20 -0 0-0 0-0 010
Louis-Jacques 20 -1 0-0 0-0 000
Henry 10 -0 0-0 0-0 010
TOTALS 200 24-57 5-89-3319 11 63
Percentages: FG .421, FT .625. 3-Point Goals: 10-30, .333
(Ferguson 5-9, Cummings 2-5, Lynch-Daniels 1-4, Mof-
fatt 1-4, Richardson 1-8). Team Rebounds: 5. Team
Turnovers: N one. Blocked Shots: 5 (Records 2, Ferguson,
Richardson, Woodward). Turnovers: 14 (Richardson 4,
Ferguson 3, Thomson 3, Cummings 2, Louis-Jacques,
Lynch-Daniels). Steals: 9 (Richardson 4, Cummings,
Ferguson, Lynch-Daniels, Records, Thomson). Technical
Fouls: None. A : 528 (1,750).
GOLF
PGA Tour
FEDEX CUP LEADERS
Through Sunday
Points Money
- ....................Hideki Matsuyama 1,276 $3,897,233
- ..................................Tom Hoge 1,116 $3,208,340
- .......................Scottie Scheffler 1,064 $3,091,814
- ................................Talor Gooch 1,001 $2,629,182
- .................................Sungjae Im 895 $2,363,018
- ....................................Luke List 803 $2,329,333
- .......................Joaquin Niemann 792 $2,822,257
- .................................Sam Burns 776 $2,067,031
- ..........................Cameron Smith 754 $2,197,375
10........................Collin Morikawa 730 $2,666,322
11.........................Viktor Hovland 708 $2,083,781
12................................Max Homa 698 $1,881,888
13.........................Patrick Cantlay 661 $1,971,600
14.....................Cameron Tringale 648 $2,054,528
15....................Maverick McNealy 616 $1,661,924
16..........................Seamus Power 610 $1,588,217
17........................Cameron Young 610 $1,916,342
18..................................Jon Rahm 607 $1,699,630
19............................Jason Kokrak 607 $1,671,260
20..........................Russell Henley 593 $1,513,083
21.....................Hudson Swafford 578 $1,547,594
22.............................Rory McIlroy 573 $2,058,000
23..........................Justin Thomas 562 $1,677,689
24............................Will Zalatoris 548 $1,556,562
25...................Mackenzie Hughes 537 $1,470,091
26...........................Lucas Herbert 519 $1,272,000
27.........................Marc Leishman 519 $1,354,296
28........................Matthew Wolff 515 $1,312,886
29...........................Keith Mitchell 452 $1,377,735
30...........................Jordan Spieth 423 $1,287,799
31.............................Lanto Griffin 420 $1,183,694
32......................Sebastian Munoz 408 $1,167,980
33.......................Denny McCarthy 404 $1,047,748
34...............................Si Woo Kim 392 $1,069,498
35..............................Mito Pereira 392 $942,930
36...............................Carlos Ortiz 378 $980,917
37.................................Danny Lee 372 $923,080
38....................Xander Schauffele 363 $1,071,475
39...............................Matt Jones 335 $925,992
40.............................Patrick Reed 324 $800,745
41.......................Sahith Theegala 314 $861,392
42.........................Brendan Steele 310 $1,019,341
43.............................Joel Dahmen 310 $878,208
44...............................Kevin Tway 303 $815,186
45..............................Troy Merritt 300 $776,360
46.......................Andrew Putnam 298 $782,487
47...............................Aaron Wise 294 $794,354
48.............................Nick Watney 293 $745,299
49.................................J.J. Spaun 285 $638,204
50...............................Adam Scott 283 $1,004,599
51..........................Scott Stallings 270 $651,036
52.............................Kevin Kisner 267 $715,755
53........................Hayden Buckley 256 $667,909
54............................Taylor Moore 255 $628,040
55.............................Russell Knox 251 $601,781
56.....................................C.T. Pan 250 $789,718
57............................Beau Hossler 247 $733,979
MEXICAN OPEN
At The Princess Mundo Imperial; In A capulco, Mexico
Purse: $1,678,065
Surface: Hardcourt outdoor
SINGLES — R OUND OF 32
Taylor Fritz (7), United States, def. Adrian Mannarino,
France, 6-3, 6-3; Peter Gojowczyk, Germany, def. Bran-
don Nakashima, United States, 6-4, 6-4; John Isner,
United States, def. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, 7-5, 6-7
(7-4), 7-6 (7-3); Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, def. Sebastian
Korda, United States, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5.
DOUBLES — R OUND OF 16
Feliciano Lopez, Spain, and Stefanos Tsitsipas, Greece,
def. John-Patrick Smith and Luke Saville, Australia, 7-6
(9-7), 6-4.
HOCKEY
NHL
ATLANTIC GP WLOT Pts GF GA
Florida.......................... 5035 10 575208145
Tampa Bay................... 4932 11 670169139
Toronto........................ 4932 14 367176137
Boston.......................... 5029 17 462145139
Detroit.......................... 5123 22 652147176
Ottawa......................... 4918 26 541130156
Buffalo......................... 5116 27 840138182
Montreal...................... 5111 33 729117197
METROPOLITAN GP WLOT Pts GF GA
Carolina........................ 5035 11 474176121
Pittsburgh.................... 5231 13 870173140
N.Y. Rangers................ 5032 13 569151127
Washington................. 5228 15 965171145
Columbus..................... 4925 23 151163180
N.Y. Islanders............... 4518 20 743111126
Philadelphia................. 5015 25 10 40128176
New Jersey.................. 5017 28 539146182
CENTRAL GP WLOT Pts GF GA
Colorado....................... 5036 10 476199143
Minnesota.................... 4731 13 365183143
St. Louis....................... 4929 14 664175137
Nashville...................... 5028 18 460153143
Dallas........................... 4927 20 256143145
Winnipeg...................... 5022 20 852145150
Chicago......................... 5218 26 844126176
Arizona......................... 5013 33 430114186
PACIFIC GP WLOT Pts GF GA
Calgary......................... 4930 13 666169114
Vegas........................... 5129 18 462169150
Edmonton..................... 5028 19 359168161
Los Angeles.................. 5026 17 759147141
Anaheim....................... 5224 19 957156158
x-Vancouver................. 5123 22 652135146
San Jose....................... 4922 22 549131154
x-Seattle...................... 5116 31 436133180
x-Late game
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Carolina 4, at Pittsburgh 3
Montreal 3, at N.Y. Islanders 2 (SO)
Florida 5, at Chicago 2
N.Y. Rangers 2, at Ottawa 1
at Columbus 7, Buffalo 3
at Arizona 3, Dallas 1
Minnesota 7, at Edmonton 3
Vegas 4, at San Jose 1
MONDAY’S RESULTS
at Boston 5, Colorado 1
Carolina 4, at Philadelphia 3 (OT)
at C algary 3, Winnipeg 1
at Montreal 5, Toronto 2
Seattle at Vancouver, Late
TUESDAY’S GAMES
Minnesota at Ottawa, 7
Nashville at Florida, 7
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 7
Toronto at Columbus, 7
N.Y. Islanders at Seattle, 10
San Jose at Anaheim, 10
WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
Buffalo at Montreal, 7:30
Colorado at Detroit, 7:30
Edmonton at Tampa Bay, 7:30
Winnipeg at Dallas, 7:30
Los Angeles at Arizona, 10
THURSDAY’S GAMES
Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 7
Columbus at Florida, 7
Minnesota at Toronto, 7
New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7
Dallas at Nashville, 8:30
Boston at Seattle, 10
Calgary at Vancouver, 10
N.Y. Islanders at San Jose, 10:30
Canadiens 5, Maple Leafs 2
TORONTO ................................ 0 02 —2
MONTREAL .............................. 2 30 —5
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Montreal, Anderson 11 (Caufield, Petry),
2:58. 2, Montreal, Caufield 6 (Anderson), 19:10.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 3, Montreal, Hoffman 9 (Gallagher), 0:38. 4,
Montreal, Anderson 12 (Caufield, Suzuki), 15:58. 5,
Montreal, Pitlick 10 (Chiarot, Gallagher), 17:56.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 6, Toronto, Mikheyev 8 (Kase, Rielly), 4:43. 7,
Toronto, Engvall 8 (Spezza, Holl), 5:28.
SHOTS ON GOAL
TORONTO .............................. 11121 4— 37
MONTREAL .............................. 8 11 5— 24
Power-play opportunities: Toronto 0 of 2; Montreal 0 of
- Goalies: Toronto, Mrazek 6-4-0 (24 shots-19 saves).
Montreal, Montembeault 4-10-4 (37-35). A: 1 0,552
(21,288). T: 2:29.
No. 21 Iowa 88,
No. 10 Indiana 82
Indiana ................................ 2329141 6— 82
Iowa .................................... 2615212 6— 88
IOWA (18-7) MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
Warnock 31 5-8 4-4 0-7 1316
Czinano 32 13-17 5-73-10 0331
Clark 39 9-20 9-9 0-8 8429
Marshall 35 0-3 2-2 1-2 242
Martin 34 0-3 0-0 0-2 630
Feuerbach 80 -0 2-2 1-1 002
Taiwo 12 0-1 0-0 1-3 010
Affolter 10 -0 0-0 0-0 000
O'Grady 83 -3 2-2 0-1 118
Team 00 -0 0-0 1-3 000
TOTALS 200 30-5524-267-3718 19 88
Percentages: FG 54.545, FT .923. 3-Point Goals: 4-19,
.211 (Warnock 2-4, Clark 2-9, Marshall 0-2, Martin 0-3,
Taiwo 0-1) Blocked Shots: 3 (O’Grady 2, Czinano 1)
Turnovers: 21 (Clark 7, Warnock 5, Czinano 2, Feuerbach
2, Taiwo 2, Marshall 1, Martin 1, Affolter 1) Steals: 2
(Warnock 1, Marshall 1) Technical Fouls: None
INDIANA (19-6) MIN FG FT O-TAPFPTS
Gulbe 38 3-7 0-0 2-5 236
Holmes 25 5-12 3-4 1-4 0513
Berger 38 8-20 6-7 0-4 3222
Cardano-Hillary 37 6-8 3-5 2-5 4515
Patberg 32 3-11 4-4 0-0 1211
Browne 10 2-3 0-0 2-4 054
Moore-McNeil 18 4-6 0-0 1-2 2411
Waggoner 20 -0 0-0 0-0 010
Team 00 -0 0-0 0-3 000
TOTALS 200 31-6716-208-2712 27 82
Percentages: FG 46.269, FT .800. 3-Point Goals: 4-16,
.250 (Moore-McNeil 3-5, Patberg 1-5, Gulbe 0-3, Berger
0-2, Cardano-Hillary 0-1) Blocked Shots: 2 (Berger 1,
Patberg 1) Turnovers: 14 (Cardano-Hillary 6, Berger 3,
Holmes 2, Patberg 2, Browne 1) Steals: 12 (Berger 3,
Cardano-Hillary 3, Browne 2, Gulbe 1, Patberg 1,
Moore-McNeil 1, Waggoner 1) Technical Fouls: None
A: 7,510
No. 12 UCLA 66,
Arizona State 52
Arizona State (10-16)
Graham 4-9 0-0 8, Lawrence 3-4 0-0 6, Gaffney 0-0 0-0 0,
Heath 4-10 0-0 9, Horne 3-12 1-2 9, Jackson 3-11 2-2 9,
Muhammad 4-8 0-0 8, Neal 1-1 0-0 3, Boakye 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 22-55 3-4 52.
UCLA (20-5)
Johnson 1-2 0-0 2, Bernard 4-10 7-7 16, Clark 7-16 1-2 16,
Juzang 3-11 4-4 10, Jaquez 3-6 5-5 13, Singleton 2-4 0-0
6, Riley 1-4 1-2 3, Kyman 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-53 18-20 66.
Halftime: UCLA 34-21. Three-point goals: Arizona State
5-19 (Horne 2-6, Neal 1-1, Heath 1-4, Jackson 1-6,
Graham 0-1, Muhammad 0-1), UCLA 6-20 (Jaquez 2-3,
Singleton 2-4, Clark 1-3, Bernard 1-5, Juzang 0-5).
Rebounds: Arizona State 22 (Graham, Jackson 5), UCLA
34 (Jaquez 10). Assists: Arizona State 12 (Horne 4),
UCLA 12 (Jaquez, Riley 3). Total fouls: Arizona State 15,
UCLA 10. A: 8,037 (13,800).
No. 10 Baylor 66,
Oklahoma State 64 (OT)
Baylor (23-5)
Thamba 3-10 2-3 8, Akinjo 2-9 2-2 6, Flagler 11-20 0-0 29,
Brown 1-4 0-0 3, Mayer 4-11 3-3 12, Sochan 3-11 0-0 6,
Bonner 1-3 0-0 2, Turner 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-68 7-8 66.
Oklahoma State (13-14)
Smith 0-1 2-4 2, Cisse 5-8 2-6 12, Anderson 4-11 0-0 10,
Likekele 6-12 0-0 12, Thompson 7-16 1-1 18, B.Williams
2-6 0-0 6, Walker 1-3 0-0 2, Newton 0-2 0-0 0, Moncrieffe
1-3 0-0 2, Ka.Boone 1-1 1-1 3. Totals 27-63 6-12 67.
Halftime: Oklahoma State 36-29. Three-point goals:
Baylor 9-30 (Flagler 7-13, Brown 1-3, Mayer 1-4, Bonner
0-2, Akinjo 0-4, Sochan 0-4), Oklahoma State 7-24
(Thompson 3-8, B.Williams 2-5, Anderson 2-7, Likekele
0-1, Walker 0-1, Newton 0-2). Fouled out: Anderson.
Rebounds: Baylor 31 (Thamba, Sochan 7), Oklahoma
State 40 (Cisse 10). Assists: Baylor 12 (Akinjo 4),
Oklahoma State 16 (Anderson, B.Williams 4). Total
fouls: Baylor 13, Oklahoma State 15.