Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 176, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 2016 Page: 10 of 18
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2B
Monday, January 25, 2016
Denton Record-Chronicle
Inside Sports
2:00
ON THE AIR
Today s TV
PRO BASKETBALL
NBA: Minnesota at Cleveland, 6 p.m., NBATV
NBA: San Antonio at Golden State, 9:30 p.m., NBATV
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Penn State at Ohio State, 6 p.m., Big Ten
Duke at Miami (Fla.), 6 p.m., ESPN
Alabama A&M at Southern, 6 p.m., ESPNU
Lafayette at Bucknell, 6:30 p.m., CBSSN
Kansas at Iowa State, 8 p.m., ESPN
Virginia at Wake Forest, 8 p.m., ESPNU
WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Tennessee at Kentucky, 6 p.m., ESPN2
Louisville at Syracuse, 6 p.m., FSSW+
* V
Alabama at Vanderbilt, 6 p.m., SEC
PRO HOCKEY
NHL: Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m., NBCSN
NHL: Calgary at Stars, 7:30 p.m., FSSW
PRO SOCCER
English Championship: Burnley vs. Derby County, 1:45 p.m., beIN
PRO TENNIS
Minute Drill
Australian Open, 8 p.m., ESPN2
Australian Open, 2 a.m. Tuesday, ESPN2
Radio
PRO HOCKEY
NHL: Calgary at Stars, 7:30 p.m., KTCK-AM1310/KTCK-FM 96.7
Skiing
Vonn breaks Cortina mark with 11th win
CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Another day in
Cortina, another record for Lindsey Vonn. The Amer-
ican won a World Cup super-G Sunday for her 11th
career victory in Cortina, breaking the resort record of
retired Austrian standout Renate Goetschl.
By winning a downhill Saturday, Vonn eclipsed
Annemarie Moser-Proell’s mark of 36 career wins in
skiing’s marquee event. Last year in Cortina, Vonn
surpassed Moser-Proell’s women’s record of 62 wins
across all events.
With another near-perfect run down the Olympia
delle Tofane course, Vonn beat Tina Weirather of
Liechtenstein by 0.69 seconds, with Viktoria Rebens-
burg of Germany third, 115 back.
Vonn took the lead in the overall standings from
Lara Gut, who finished fifth, and leads her Swiss rival
by 45 points.
Vonn has 75 wins overall and is approaching Inge-
mar Stenmark’s men’s mark of 86.
Vonn also holds the record for wins at any single
resort with 18 at Lake Louise in Alberta, Canada.
Scoreboard
Hannah Foslien/Getty Images
Adam Rippon competes in
the men’s free skate at the
U.S. championships Sunday
in St. Paul, Minn.
TRANSACTIONS
Anaheim 4, Detroit 3
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 2
New Jersey 3, Winnipeg 1
Colorado 3, Dallas 1
Arizona 3, Los Angeles 2
Nashville 4, Edmonton 1
Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, ppd.
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Ottawa 3, N.Y. Rangers 0
Carolina 5, Calgary 2
Chicago 2, St. Louis 0
Pittsburgh at Washington, ppd., weather
Los Angeles at San Jose, late
TODAY’S GAMES
Detroit at N.Y Islanders, 6 p.m.
Boston at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Montreal at Columbus, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 6:30 p.m.
Calgary at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Arizona at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m.
BASKETBALL
Furman 75, UNC-Greensboro 59
Georgia Tech 76, Clemson 63
LSU 53, Georgia 46
Liberty 72, Longwood 67
Louisiana Tech 72, Southern Miss. 37
Marshall 80, Old Dominion 62
Pittsburgh 58, Virginia 55
Rhodes 60, Berry 41
South Carolina 57, Mississippi St. 51
South Florida 88, UCF 49
Winthrop 50, Campbell 49
MIDWEST
DePaul 96, Providence 50
Indiana 91, Northwestern 84
Indiana St. 59, Bradley 37
Loyola of Chicago 57, Illinois St. 41
Marquette 79, Creighton 72
Missouri 79, Florida 64
Missouri St. 82, S. Illinois 77
N. Iowa 79, Drake 73
Nebraska 93, Michigan 81
Notre Dame 80, Virginia Tech 41
Oklahoma St. 74, Kansas 46
Purdue 90, Iowa 73
UT Martin 84, SE Missouri 74
Wichita St. 58, Evansville 50
FAR WEST
Arizona St. 62, Arizona 47
Oregon 77, Utah 65
Oregon St. 61, Colorado 47
Southern Cal 61, California 47
UMKC 63, Grand Canyon 57
EAST
Binghamton 75, Mass.-Lowell 70, OT
Dayton 71, Saint Joseph's 61
Fairfield 52, Canisius 48
Fairleigh Dickinson 66, Mount St. Mary's 53
Georgetown 57, Villanova 51
Hartford 48, New Hampshire 44
Hofstra 64, Towson 60
Iona 64, Monmouth (NJ) 49
Maine 55, Stony Brook 52
Ohio St. 67, Rutgers 58
Ouinnipiac 94, Siena 52
Sacred Heart 77, Wagner 73
Seton Hall 98, Butler 77
St. John's 57, Xavier 41
Wake Forest 65, Boston College 59
FOOTBALL
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS - Named Todd
Monken offensive coordinator and wide receiv-
ers coach.
NBA
Rippon
claims
U.S. title
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC DIVISION
W L Pet GB
29 15 .659 -
24 21 .533 51/2
22 24 .478 8
12 33 .267 171/2
6 39 .133 231/2
Toronto
Boston
New York
Brooklyn
Philadelphia
HOCKEY
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
NHL — Suspended Los Angeles F Milan Lucic
for one game, without pay, for punching unsus-
pecting Arizona D Kevin Connauton during
their game on Saturday.
ARIZONA COYOTES - Recalled F Christian
Thomas from Springfield (AHL).
DETROIT RED WINGS - Recalled LW Eric
Tangradi and D Nick Jensen from Grand Rap-
ids (AHL). Assigned C Joakim Andersson to
Grand Rapids.
EDMONTON OILERS - Assigned D Brad
Hunt and Griffin Reinhart and F Zack Kassian
to Bakersfield (AHL).
SOUTHEAST DIVISION
W L Pet GB
26 19 .578 -
23 21 .523 2'&
Atlanta
Miami
Washington
Charlotte
Orlando
20 21 .488 4
21 23 .477 41/2
20 22 .476 41/2
CENTRAL DIVISION
W L Pet GB
30 12 .714 -
25 18 .581 51/2
23 21 .523 8
23 21 .523 8
19 27 .413 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
SOUTHWEST DIVISION
W L Pet GB
38 6 .864 -
25 20 .556 13'/2
25 21 .543 14
24 22 .522 15
16 27 .372 211
NORTHWEST DIVISION
W L Pet GB
33 13 .717 -
19 24 .442 1214
20 26 .435 13
17 27 .386 15
14 31 .311 181/2
By Rachel Cohen
Associated Press
ST. PAUL, Minn. - Adam
Rippon interrupted Nathan
Chen to marvel at the idea of do-
ing four quadruple jumps in one
practice session, let alone the
free skate at the U.S. champion-
ships.
Cleveland
Chicago
Indiana
Detroit
Milwaukee
ECHL
GOLF
FORT WAYNE KOMETS - Signed D Gentry
Zollars.
MISSOURI MAVERICKS - Released F Quinn
European Tour
Abu Dhabi Championship
AT ABU DHABI GOLF CLUB
ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
PURSE: $2.7 MILLION
YARDAGE: 7,583; PAR: 72
FINAL
70-68-65-69 -272
69-73-64-67 -273
66-70-70-68 -274
65-72-70-67 -274
69-68-69-71 -277
Pro football
Former Texan Gaffney arrested
on drug charges after traffic stop
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Former NFL player Ja-
bar Gaffney is facing drug charges after a traffic stop
in central Florida.
The Florida Highway Patrol says Gaffney, 35, was
stopped on Interstate 75 in Sumter County on Friday.
He was arrested on charges of marijuana possession
and possession of drug paraphernalia. He posted
$7,000 bail and was released.
The former Florida receiver played for hve NFL
teams from 2002 to 2012, including his hrst four for
Houston.
Cycling
American Haga has neck, chin surgery
after car hits riders during training
MADRID — The Giant-Alpecin team says War-
ren Barguil fractured his wrist and John Degenkolb
fractured his arm when a car ran into them and four
teammates while training in Spain on Saturday.
In a statement released a day after the six were
taken to local hospitals, the German team says Bar-
guil “may require surgery” on his hand, while Degen-
kolb has received surgery to treat a cut in his upper
Smith.
QUAD CITY MALLARDS—Released G Jamie
Morris as emergency backup.
COLLEGE
OKLAHOMA — Announced QB Cody Thomas
is leaving the football program.
San Antonio
Memphis
Dallas
Houston
New Orleans
Rickie Fowler
Thomas Pieters
Rory Mcllroy
Henrik Stenson
Byeong-Hun An
Alejandro Canizares 71-71-66-69 —277
Branden Grace
Joost Luiten
Marcel Siem
Jordan Spieth
Thomas Bjorn
Peter Hanson
Figure skating
U.S. championships
Rippon didn’t land any Sun-
day, but he is now the national
champion — while Chen, his 16-
year-old training partner, was
third despite becoming the first
American man to complete four
in one program. And the run-
ner-up, Max Aaron, had two on
a day sure to reignite the debate
about the value of artistry vs.
athleticism in hgure skating.
The 26-year-old Rippon fell
on his only quad attempt, but he
is vastly ahead of Aaron and
Chen in the expression and cho-
reography that still make up a
huge part of scores.
“It’s not a jump competition,
it’s not a choreography competi-
tion and it’s not a spin competi-
tion,” Rippon said. “It takes a lit-
tle bit of everything.”
While Aaron and Chen did lit-
tle more than obligatory move-
ments of their arms between their
jumps, saving energy for the
quads, Rippon sped through
complex footwork in perfect tim-
ing to his Beatles medley.
“I really think my experience
and my maturity was what
helped me prevail,” he said.
Rippon has struggled to hve
up to his potential for much of his
career, and in recent years he has
repeatedly questioned whether he
wanted to stay in the sport He
had a breakthrough performance
at the 2015 U.S. championships
for his second runner-up hnish
but had not reached that level
again until Sunday.
“You should never give up on
yourself, because there have
been many times that I’ve want-
ed to,” he said.
Rippon cleanly landed eight
triple jumps after the fall on his
opening quadruple lutz and
earned top marks for his spins
and footwork. He burst into
tears when his scores were an-
nounced to vault him into first
place ahead of Aaron and Chen.
Rippon earned 182.74 points
for his free skate for a total of
270.75. Aaron, the 2013 U.S
champ who led after the short
program, received 177.72 points
for 269.55 total. Chen had 180.60
points for 266.93 total after he fell
on a triple axel.
Ross Miner, who was in sec-
ond place after the short pro-
gram, had hoped to give himself
a 25th birthday present Sunday
of a trip back home to Boston for
the world championships. But
he dropped to hfth after a mis-
take-filled skate.
Chen will compete in both
the junior and senior world
championships. Jason Brown,
who was unable to defend his
U.S. title because of a back
strain, petitioned to be added to
the worlds team, but the feder-
ation decided to send Chen and
Aaron along with Rippon.
On Friday, Chen became the
hrst American man to land two
quads in the short program.
FOOTBALL
Oklahoma City
NFL Playoffs
WILD CARD PLAYOFFS
JAN. 9
Kansas City 30, Houston 0
Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16
JAN. 10
Seattle 10, Minnesota 9
Green Bay 35, Washington 18
Utah
Portland
Denver
Minnesota
66-74-66-71 -277
69-68-68-72 -277
72-68-70-67 -277
68-73-68-68 -277
68- 69-71-70 -278
69- 69-69-71 -278
74-69-65-70 -278
Rafa Cabrera-Bello 70-67-70-72 -279
PACIFIC DIVISION
W L Pet GB
40 4 .909 -
28 16 .636 12
20 23 .465 19'/i
14 31 .311 2614
9 37 ,196 32
Golden State
L.A. Clippers
Sacramento
Phoenix
L.A. Lakers
Shiv Kapur
Ian Poulter
Johan Carlsson
Trevor Fisher Jnr
Martin Kaymer
Maximilian Kieffer
Richie Ramsay
Wu Ashun
70- 69-68-72 -279
69-71-71-69 -280
69-70-70-71 -280
69-69-71-71 -280
71- 71-68-70 -280
73-66-72-69 -280
69-72-69-70 -280
DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS
JAN. 16
New England 27, Kansas City 20
Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT
JAN. 17
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
Utah at Washington, ppd.
New Orleans 116, Milwaukee 99
Charlotte 97, New York 84
Boston at Philadelphia, ppd.
Minnesota 106, Memphis 101
Chicago 96, Cleveland 83
Phoenix 98, Atlanta 95
Denver 104, Detroit 101
Sacramento 108, Indiana 97
Portland 121, L.A. Lakers 103
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Houston 115, Dallas 104
Toronto 112, L.A. Clippers 94
Boston 112, Philadelphia 92
Brooklyn 116, Oklahoma City 106
TODAY’S GAMES
Minnesota at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 6 p.m.
Miami at Chicago, 7 p.m.
Houston at New Orleans, 7 p.m.
Orlando at Memphis, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Utah, 8 p.m.
Atlanta at Denver, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Sacramento, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
TENNIS
Carolina 31, Seattle 24
Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16
Australian Open
AT MELBOURNE PARK
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA
PURSE: $30.18 MILLION
SURFACE: HARD-OUTDOOR
ALSO
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS
SUNDAY
Denver 20, New England 18
Carolina 49, Arizona 15
Brandon Stone
Bernd Wiesberger
Thongchai Jaidee
a-Bryson Dechambeau 64-72-78-72 —286
73-69-68 72 -,282
72-70-70-70 -282
/ I-70-67-76 -284
SUNDAY
SINGLES
PRO BOWL
SUNDAY
AT HONOLULU
Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 6 p.m. (ESPN)
PGA CareerBuilder
MEN
LA QUINTA, CALIF.
PURSE: $5.8 MILLION
PAR 72
T-PGA WEST STADIUM: 7,113 YARDS
J-PGA WEST NICKLAUS TC: 7,159
Q-LA QUINTA CC: 7,060
FINAL ROUND AT STADIUM COURSE
(X-WON ON SECOND PLAYOFF HOLE)
x-Jason Dufner 64j-65t-64q-70—263-25
68t-68q-62j-65—263-25
66j-66t-67q-68—267-21
68q-65j-66t-68—267-21
71 t-66q-62j-68—267-21
68j-68t-66q-66—268-20
65q-65j-65t-73—268-20
66t-66q-64j-72—268-20
67t-71q-64j-67—269-19
66q-66j-69t-68—269-19
67q-66j-72t-65—270-18
68j-69t-66q-67—270-18
68j-67t-66q-69—270-18
68j-69t-67q-67—271-17
69t-68q-67j-67—271-17
72t-65q-66j-68—271-17
69t-67q-67j-69—272-16
68q-64j-72t-68—272-16
70j-71t-65q-66—272-16
70j-65t-68q-69—272-16
66j-71t-65q-70—272-16
68j-69t-65q-70—272-16
67t-66q-66j-73—272-16
68t-72q-65j-68—273-15
66q-69j-67t-71 —273-15
65j-69t-68q-71—273-15
69q-64j-66t-74—273-15
70t-67q-68j-69—274-14
66q-71 j-67t-70—274-14
69q-69j-68t-68—274-; 4
Michael Thompson 66q-67j-73t-68—274-14
Anirban Lahiri
Mark Hubbard
Ben Martin
Matt Jones
Ricky Barnes
Brett Stegmaier
Blayne Barber
Brendan Steele
Bronson Burgoon 73q-68j-66t-68—275-13
Wes Roach
Graham DeLaet
Angel Cabrera
Aaron Baddeley
Daniel Summerhays 71 t-67q-65j-73—276-12
Jerry Kelly
Alex Cejka
Patton Kizzire
Robert Garrigus
Matt Kuchar
Rod Pampling
Russell Henley
Jim Herman
Martin Laird
Kyle Reifers
Jeff Overton
Mark Wilson
Hudson Swafford
Patrick Reed
Dawie van der Walt 69q-69j-68t-72—278-10
Roberto Castro
Tim Wilkinson
Dicky Pride
Chris Stroud
Francesco Molinari 67q-67j-72t-73—279 -9
Kevin Chappell
D.A. Points
Derek Ernst
Freddie Jacobson
Michael Kim
FOURTH ROUND
Kei Nishikori (7), Japan, def. Jo-Wilfried Tson-
ga (9), France, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4.
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Gilles Simon
(14), France, 6-3, 6-7 (1), 6-4, 4-6, 6-3.
Tomas Berdych (6), Czech, def. Roberto Bau-
tista Agut (24), Spain, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3,1-6, 6-3.
Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. David Gof-
fin (15), Belgium, 6-2, 6-1, 6-4.
WOMEN
FOURTH ROUND
Maria Sharapova (5), Russia, def. Belinda Ben-
cic (12), Switzerland, 7-5, 7-5.
Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Marga-
rita Gasparyan, Russia, 6-2, 6-1.
Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. Anna-
Lena Friedsam, Germany, 6-7 (6), 6-1, 7-5.
Carla Suarez Navarro (10), Spain, def. Daria
Gavrilova, Australia, 0-6, 6-3, 6-2.
DOUBLES
SUPER BOWL L
FEB. 7
AT SANTA CLARA, CALIF.
Denver vs. Carolina, 5:30 p.m. (CBS)
leg.
Bowl Glance
David Lingmerth
Andrew Loupe
Phil Mickelson
Kevin Na
Luke List
Jamie Lovemark
Adam Hadwin
Si Woo Kim
Giant-Alpecin says American rider Chad Haga
was airlifted to a hospital Saturday and had “success-
ful” surgery on his neck and chin. It adds Haga has an
orbital fracture.
German Max Walscheid likely will require surgery
on a fractured hand and tibia, while Swede Fredrik
Ludvigsson and Dutchman Ramon Sinkeldam had
scratches and bruises “all over” their bodies.
Olympics
Daily inspections meant to battle Zika
RIO DE JANEIRO — Rio de Janeiro’s Olympic
venues will be inspected daily during the Summer
Games in a bid to prevent the spread of a mosquito-
borne vims linked to a rare birth defect and a condi-
tion that can cause paralysis, local organizers said
Sunday.
Brazil is suffering from an outbreak of Zika vims,
which health officials say may be behind a spike in
cases of microcephaly, which sees infants born with
unusually small heads, as well as the paralysis-caus-
ing Guillain-Barre syndrome. The U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention has advised preg-
nant women to reconsider travel to Brazil and 21 oth-
er countries with Zika outbreaks.
Teams will scour Rio’s Olympic and Paralympic
sites daily, looking for stagnant waters that are the
breeding grounds for the Aedes aegypti mosquito
that transmits Zika, as well as dengue and chikungu-
nya.
SATURDAY
EAST-WEST SHRINE CLASSIC
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.
West 29, East 9
NFLPA COLLEGIATE BOWL
CARSON, CALIF.
National 18, American 17
Men’s College Scores
SOUTHWEST
Bill Haas
SATURDAY
SENIOR BOWL
AT MOBILE, ALA.
North vs. South, 1:30 p.m. (NFLN)
Brian Harman
Kevin Streelman
Charles Howell III
Smylie Kaufman
Cameron Tringale
Bud Cauley
Scott Pinckney
Jason Gore
Chez Reavie
Webb Simpson
Lucas Glover
Seung-Yul Noh
Ryan Palmer
Martin Piller
Ben Crane
Colt Knost
John Huh
Sean O'Hair
Bryce Molder
Jonas Blixt
Tulsa 75, UCF 60
SOUTH
Belmont 103, Tennessee St. 95
Clayton St. 83, North Georgia 75
East Carolina 84, Memphis 83
Jacksonville St. 78, Morehead St. 74
Lipscomb 91, Florida Gulf Coast 75
North Carolina 75, Virginia Tech 70
Pikeville at Cincinnati Christian, ccd.
Radford 69, Gardner-Webb 59
Rhodes 86, Berry 66
UNO Greensboro 86, Samford 78
VCU 84, St. Bonaventure 76
Valparaiso 71, N. Kentucky 46
Virginia 73, Syracuse 65
W. Carolina 86, Mercer 80,20T
Winthrop 82, Longwood 68
MIDWEST
Cincinnati 97, Tulane 75
Indiana St. 82, Evansville 65
Iowa 83, Purdue 71
SE Missouri 68, UT Martin 60, OT
Wright St. 80, Ill.-Chicago 66
Youngstown St. 70, Cleveland St. 55
FAR WEST
Oregon St. 85, Southern Cal 70
EAST
Binghamton 64, Mass.-Lowell 57
Colgate 76, Holy Cross 61
Dayton 64, Fordham 50
Fairfield 98, Iona 91
Hofstra 91, William & Mary 63
Marquette 78, St. John's 73
Marquette 78, St. John's 73
Monmouth (NJ) 83, Marist 72
Mount St. Mary's 87, Fairleigh Dickinson 72
New Hampshire 84, Hartford 71
North Florida 94, NJIT 80
Providence 82, Villanova 76, OT
Rider 75, Ouinnipiac 52
Sacred Heart 67, Wagner 58
Saint Joseph's 69, La Salle 48
Siena 99, Canisius 78
Temple 89, SMU 80
UNO Wilmington 77, Drexel 71
Vermont 79, UMBC 72
MEN
SECOND ROUND
Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi, Italy
def. Marc Lopez and Feliciano Lopez (15),
Spain, 1-6, 7-6 (1), 7-5.
HOCKEY
i; ID ROUND
Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, and Marcel Granollers
(16), Spain, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Mar-
celo Melo (2), Brazil, 7-6 (3), 2-6, 6-3.
Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Radek Stepanek,
Czech Republic, def. Pablo Andujar and Pablo
Carreno Busta, Spain, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4.
Vasek Pospisil, Canada, and Jack Sock (9),
United States, def. Sam Groth and Lleyton He-
witt, Australia, 6-4, 6-2.
Treat Huey, Philippines, and Max Mirnyi (14),
Belarus, def. Rohan Bopanna, India, and Florin
Mergea (4), Romania, 6-4, 6-3.
WOMEN
THIRD ROUND
Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany, and CoCo
Vandeweghe (12), United States, def. Mirjana
Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, and Barbora Strycova,
Czech Republic, 7-6 (5), 3-6, 6-3.
Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka (7),
Czech, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues and Ar-
antxa Parra Santonja (10), Spain, 6-2, 7-6 (7).
Chan Hao-ching and Yung-jan (2), Taiwan, def.
Jocelyn Rae and Anna Smith, Britain, 6-3,6-4.
Anastasia and Arina Rodionova, Australia, def.
Dominika Cibulkova, Slovakia, and Kirsten
Flipkens, Belgium, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4.
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ATLANTIC DIVISION
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
48 28 15 5 61 130 107
48 26 18 4 56 129 117
48 24 16 8 56 118 122
47 25 17 5 55 142 123
48 24 20 4 52 132 124
49 23 20 6 52 137 152
46 17 20 9 43 113 128
48 19 25 4 42 108 128
METROPOLITAN DIVISION
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
46 35 8 3 73 155 100
48 26 17 5 57 136 126
46 25 15 6 56 128 114
49 25 19 5 55 114 116
47 23 17 7 53 119 120
50 22 20 8 52 118 135
45 20 17 8 48 103 121
49 17 27 5 39 123 159
WESTERN CONFERENCE
CENTRAL DIVISION
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
52 33 15 4 70 147 117
49 30 14 5 65 160 132
52 28 16 8 64 129 128
50 26 21 3 55 138 133
48 23 17 8 54 120 113
48 22 18 8 52 125 129
48 21 24 3 45 121 138
PACIFIC DIVISION
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
47 29 15 3 61 123 107
46 25 18 3 53 134 125
47 23 19 5 51 127 140
49 20 18 11 51 121 137
46 21 18 7 49 95 109
46 21 22 3 45 124 142
50 19 26 5 43 122 149
Florida
Tampa Bay
Detroit
Boston
Montreal
Ottawa
Toronto
Buffalo
64q-68j-711-71 -274-14
71 j-69t-66q-68—274-14
66j-70t-69q-70—275-13
70t-67q-67j-71 —275-13
66q-70j-68t-71 —275-13
67j-71t-68q-69—275-13
66q-70j-67t-72—275-13
68q-65j-68t-74—275-13
Washington
N.Y Rangers
N.Y. Islanders
New Jersey
Pittsburgh
Carolina
Philadelphia
Columbus
67J-71 t-69q-68—275-13
67j-69t-69q-71 —276-12
67q-66j-72t-71 —276-12
67j-69t-70q-70—276-12
64q-70j-69t-73—276-12
67j-73t-66q-70—276-12
71 q-67j-69t-69—276-12
71 j-66t-68q-72—277-11
67q-67j-72t-71 -277-11
69t-66q-68j-74—277-11
70t-71q-65j-71 -277-11
70t-67q-66j-74—277-11
70t-67q-69j-71 -277-11
74t-66q-67j-70—277-11
64j-71t-70q-73—278-10
72t-66q-67j-73—278-10
71 j-69t-66q-72—278-10
69q-69j-68t-72—278-10
TODAY
SINGLES
WOMEN
FOURTH ROUND
Angelique Kerber (7), Germany, def. Annika
Beck, Germany, 6-4, 6-0.
Victoria Azarenka (14), Belarus, def. Barbora
Strycova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-4.
DOUBLES
MEN
THIRD ROUND
Adrian Mannarino and Lucas Pouille, France,
def. Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah
(12) , Colombia, 6-3, 7-6 (6).
Jamie Murray, Britain, and Bruno Soares (7),
Brazil, def. Dominic Inglot, Britain, and Robert
Lindstedt (11), Sweden, 6-3, 6-4.
WOMEN
THIRD ROUND
Julia Goerges, Germany, and Karolina Pliskova
(13) , Czech Republic, def. Caroline Garcia and
Kristina Mladenovic (3), France, 6-1, 7-6 (5).
Xu Yi-Fan and Zheng Saisai (15), China, def.
Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Oksana Kalashni-
kova, Georgia, 6-2, 6-4.
Chicago
Dallas
St. Louis
Colorado
Minnesota
Nashville
Winnipeg
IOC recommends that sex reassignment
surgery not be required for competitions
Los Angeles
San Jose
Arizona
Vancouver
Anaheim
Calgary
Edmonton
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime
LONDON — Transgender athletes should be al-
lowed to compete in the Olympics and other interna-
tional events without undergoing sex reassignment
surgery, according to new guidelines adopted by the
IOC.
Women’s College Scores
SOUTHWEST
Kansas St. 65, Texas Tech 53
West Virginia 97, TCU 84
SOUTH
Auburn 71, Arkansas 60, OT
Belmont 80, Tennessee St. 65
Clayton St. 68, North Georgia 62
Duke 71, North Carolina 55
Florida Gulf Coast 71, Lipscomb 39
Florida St. 69, Miami (Fla.) 58
69q-70]-68t-71 -278-10
69j-67t-69q-74—279 -9
69j-68t-68q-74—279 -9
71 j-65t-69q-74—279 -9
loss
International Olympic Committee medical offi-
cials told The Associated Press on Sunday they
changed the policy to adapt to current scientific, so-
cial and legal attitudes on transgender issues.
The guidelines are designed as recommendations
— not rules or regulations — for international sports
federations and other bodies to follow and should ap-
ply for this year’s Olympics.
Under the previous IOC guidelines, athletes who
transitioned from male to female or vice versa were
required to have reassignment surgery followed by at
least two years of hormone therapy in order to be eli-
gible to compete.
Now, surgery will no longer be required, with fe-
male-to-male transgender athletes eligible to take
part in men’s competitions “without restriction.”
Male-to-female transgender athletes will need to
demonstrate that their testosterone level has been be-
73q-66|-66t-76—281 -7
67j-72t-67q-75—281 -7
741-67q-66j-75—282 -6
69t-67q-71 j-77—284 -4
70q-68j-69t-78—285 -3
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
Boston 3, Columbus 2, SO
Montreal 3, Toronto 2, SO
Pittsburgh 5, Vancouver 4
San Jose 4, Minnesota 3
UPCOMING LOCAL SCHEDULE
TODAY
GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER
Arlington Uplift Summit International at
Argyle, 6 p.m.
Krum at Sanger, 7:45 p.m.
Dallas Bishop Lynch at Liberty Christian,
8 p.m.
GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
Ryan at Keller Timber Creek, 6 p.m.
Fort Worth Brewer at Denton, 6 p.m.
Keller Fossil Ridge at Guyer, 6 p.m.
Aubrey at Argyle, 6:15 p.m.
Pilot Point at Callisburg, 6:15 p.m.
Ponder at Whitesboro, 6:15 p.m.
Krum at Sanger, 6:15 p.m.
Dallas Bishop Lynch at Liberty Christian,
6:30 p.m.
Lake Dallas at Fort Worth Carter-River-
side, 7:30 p.m.
BOYS HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER
Lake Dallas at Grapevine, 7 p.m.
Saginaw Chisholm Trail at Denton, 7:15
p.m.
Keller at Guyer, 7:30 p.m.
Ryan at Keller Central, 7:45 p.m.
GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER
TUESDAY
BOYS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
Keller Fossil Ridge at Guyer, 7:30 p.m.
Aubrey at Argyle, 7:30 p.m.
Pilot Point at Callisburg, 7:30 p.m.
Ryan at Keller Timber Creek, 7:30 p.m.
Fort Worth Brewer at Denton, 7:30 p.m.
Fort Worth Carter-Riverside at Lake
Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Ponder at Whitesboro, 7:30 p.m.
Denton at Saginaw Chisholm Trail
Keller Central at Ryan, 7:15 p.m.
Grapevine at Lake Dallas, 7:15 p.m.
Guyer at Keller, 7:45 p.m.
low a certain cutoff point for at least one year before
their first competition.
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
TWU at Cameron, 5:30 p.m.
— The Associated Press
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 176, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 2016, newspaper, January 25, 2016; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1127329/m1/10/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .