Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/635712
COLLEGEMEN'S BASKETBALL St. John's vs. Xavier:3:30 p.m., FS1. Notre Dame at Miami: 4p.m., ESPN2. Penn State at Iowa: 4p.m., ESPNU. Marquette vs. Seton Hall: 5:30p.m., FS1. Kansas State at Kansas: 6 p.m., ESPN2. Oklahoma State at Texas Tech: 6p.m., ESPNU. Arizona State vs. Washing- ton: 8p.m., ESPNU. NBA BASKETBALL Golden State Warriors at Washington Wizards: 5p.m., CSNBA, ESPN. Chicago Bulls at Sacramento Kings: 7p.m., CSN. Minnesota Timberwolves at Los Angeles Clippers: 7:30 p.m., ESPN. LPGA GOLF Coates Championship Round 1: 11a.m., GOLF. PGA GOLF Phoenix Shot at Glory: 2p.m., GOLF. EPGA GOLF Dubai Desert Classic Round 1: 8p.m., GOLF. Dubai Desert Classic: 2:30 a.m., GOLF. NHL HOCKEY Detroit Red Wings at Tampa Bay Lightning: 5p.m., NBCSN. EPL SOCCER Newcastle U. at Everton: 11:55a.m., NBCSN. ATP TENNIS Sud de France Early Round: 7 a.m., TENNIS. Sud de France Early Round: 10 a.m., TENNIS. Ecuador Open Early Round: noon, TENNIS. Ecuador Open Early Round: 3:30p.m., TENNIS. Sud de France Early Round: 3:30a.m., TENNIS. Sud de France Early Round: 5:30a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair He has watched Man- ning so intently the past couple of months to learn whatever he can from the five-time NFL MVP, noting, "I even picked the seat be- side him in the team meet- ing room just to get his en- ergy." Davis matched his ca- reer high with 13 touch- down receptions in 2013, and believes he can still be that dominant again. He has had tough stretches be- fore when he didn't get as many chances as he'd like. When someone sug- gested that Sunday might be his final game, Davis chuckled, "Oh, come on, man, no way, no way." "As long as I can run a 4.3 or a 4.4 I'm going to continue to play the game. When that leaves, then I'll stop playing," said Da- vis, who is still running a 4.3-second 40-yard dash. "I'm leaving on my own terms, most definitely." Davis' experience in big games and athleticism is a big reason Denver acquired him. "He's brought that," gen- eral manager John Elway said. "Obviously, the play time's been up and down, but he's made some big catches for us. He came in a short window, too, so trying to get him comfort- able with the offense, what we're doing, and also it was right around the time that Brock started and came in. He's always there, he's al- ways a threat and the de- fense always has to worry about him." Davis has been providing his share of insight already about how it felt to come so close and lose on the NFL's biggest stage. His versatility also has allowed the Bron- cos to run more two- and three-tight end sets. "Vernon's a heck of a player. We came in to- gether '06 class, so 10 years in the game for him," Bron- cos tight end Owen Daniels said. "A ton of playoff ex- perience, Super Bowl expe- rience, that can't be over- looked in terms of being able to relay that to guys and kind of alert us to what might be going on during the week. He lives around the corner from here. He's great for this week specifi- cally. He's been a great ad- dition to our team." Davis FROM PAGE 1 players is the sort of thing that make a guy a great as- sistant but not so great as the head coach. Phillips has been fired from both positions more times than he can count. Over the decades, he has been shoehorned into this classification: great defen- sive coordinator, but some- one who cannot hold down the top job. This season's Broncos are No. 1 in yards allowed, passing yards allowed and sacks. But Phillips' head- coaching record is 82-61, and he has a grand total of one playoff win. Of his three head-coaching stints, in Denver, Buffalo and Dal- las, none lasted longer than four seasons. He's learned to live with that, and it eventually led him to what is, officially, his third job with the Bron- cos. He was defensive coordi- nator from 1989-92, when Dan Reeves was wind- ing down a stint that in- cluded three Super Bowls. Then Phillips became head coach when Reeves got fired. Then, six jobs later (eight if you count two of his stints as interim head coach), he returned at age 68 to become the defen- sive coordinator again, this time working for John El- way and Gary Kubiak. "He said, 'My goal is to be the greatest defensive coordinator in the history of the NFL," Elway said. "I liked that statement." Phillips says he learned the most in Houston, where he teamed up with his dad in the late '70s to form one of the best teams in football. But the Oilers had the bad luck of being good at when Pittsburgh was putting the finishing touches on a dynasty. They lost two straight years to the Steelers in the AFC ti- tle game. After the second one, came what might have been Bum's finest moment. "One year ago, we knocked on the door. This year, we beat on the door. Next year, we're gonna kick the son of a (expletive) in," he said during a rally in front of 70,000-plus 'Luv Ya Blue'-singing fans at the Astrodome. But the next year, the Oilers lost in the wildcard round to the Raiders, who also went on to win the Super Bowl. By New Year's Eve of 1980, both Wade and his daddy were out of jobs. "That's when I real- ized that you've just got to coach as hard as you can, do the best you can," Phil- lips said. "Someone will recognize it if they want." They're recognizing it now. Phillips FROM PAGE 1 "We will have Summer Games, but for us it's win- ter time," he said. "We will not have an epidemic or pandemic situation. We can't say we won't have any cases (during the games) but we see this as a min- imal risk." Daniel Soranz, Rio's city health secretary, told reporters the mosquitoes around the Olympic Park, the heart of the games, were not primarily the Ae- des aegypt type that trans- mit Zika. "We have routine daily actions in the area in or- der to diminish the num- ber of mosquitoes," he said. Jaques Wagner, the chief of staff for Brazil president Dilma Rousseff, said Mon- day there was no risk to athletes unless "they are pregnant women." He said pregnant women were "not recommended" to travel to Brazil. The Zika virus is an- other problem for Rio or- ganizers, who have been forced to cut about $500 million to keep the $2 bil- lion operating budget in balance with Brazil going through its deepest reces- sion since the 1930s. The local currency has lost about 30 percent of its value against the dol- lar in the last year, infla- tion is above 10 percent and Rousseff is fighting im- peachment. Rio organizing commit- tee spokesman Mario An- drada was asked how orga- nizers can fund programs to kill mosquitoes as they slash other expenditures. "In this case the most important thing to do is obviously to care for those who have been infected and to prevent new infec- tions, and not to worry if we have budget or not," An- drada said. "We have the funds that we need to do the work that we have to do," An- drada added, without spec- ifying the cost. He was also asked if tourists were getting wor- ried about traveling to Bra- zil. "No. I don't have even one request to return tick- ets," he replied. Christophe Dubi, the IOC's executive director of the Olympic Games, said sports federations were briefed about Zika on Tues- day at the IOC offices in Lausanne, Switzerland. He said the Olympics had dealt with the SARS virus before the 2008 Bei- jing Games, and Ebola dur- ing the 2014 Summer Youth Games in Nanjing, China. "It is not unusual, not comfortable obviously, but at the same time there's a very good response from the Brazilian authorities," he said, "especially with the huge mobilization of armed forces." APSportsWriter Graham Dunbar in Lausanne, Switzerland, and SNTV producer Filipe de Almeida in Rio contributed to this report. Zika FROM PAGE 1 said in a statement. "On behalf of everyone at NAS- CAR, I wish Tony a full re- covery and look forward to seeing him back in our sport when he's ready to re- turn." Stewart turns 45 in May and missed a third of the 2013 season with a broken leg he sustained in a sprint car accident. A year later, his car struck and killed a fellow driver at a dirt track in New York. Stewart was cleared of any criminal wrongdoing, but faces a civil suit from the family of Kevin Ward Jr. Stewart spoke last month of his excitement over his upcoming fi- nal season, and said he'd likely return to racing in non-NASCAR events upon his retirement. He has not competed in anything out of a Sprint Cup race since Ward's death in 2014. But he also spoke of what he'd like to accom- plish in this final season with a focus on winning his first Daytona 500. Stewart is 0-17 in the crown jewel event and came heart- breakingly close to win- ning it several times dur- ing his career. It remains one of the few holes on a resume that includes the three championships, 48 victories and more than $122 million in winnings. He goes into the year with a new crew chief — his third change since he won the title in 2011 — and hopes to find some success on the track after three long years. Both the in- jury to his leg and Ward's death took a toll on Stew- art, and he has not won a race since 2013, before he was injured. Stewart was 28th in the final Sprint Cup standings last year with three top-10 finishes and 24 laps led, both career lows. Speaking to reporters at the Rolex 24 at Day- tona last week, A.J. Foyt expressed sympathy for Stewart and said the driver has not gotten over Ward's death. "I feel sorry for Tony, I think people don't realize that wreck really hurt him more," Foyt said. "He's re- ally a soft-hearted person." Stewart FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFLPLAYOFFGLANCE Wild-Card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 KansasCity30,Houston0 Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 New England 27, Kansas City 20 Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT Sunday, Jan. 17 Carolina 31, Seattle 24 Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC Denver 20, New England 18 NFC Carolina 49, Arizona 15 Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Irvin 49, Team Rice 27 Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara Denver vs. Carolina, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) Basketball NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 44 4 .917 — Clippers 32 16 .667 12 Sa cr am en to 2 1 27 . 43 8 23 Phoenix 14 35 .286 301/2 Lakers 9 41 .180 36 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 40 8 .833 — Memphis 29 20 .592 111/2 Dallas 28 23 .549 131/2 Houston 26 25 .510 151/2 New Orleans 18 29 .383 211/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 37 13 .740 — Portland 23 26 .469 131/2 Utah 22 25 .468 131/2 Denver 19 30 .388 171/2 Minnesota 14 35 .286 221/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Toronto 32 16 .667 — Boston 28 22 .560 5 New York 23 28 .451 101/2 Brooklyn 12 37 .245 201/2 Philadelphia 7 41 .146 25 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L P ct G B Atlanta 28 22 .560 — Miami 27 22 .551 1/2 Charlotte 23 25 .479 4 Washington 21 25 .457 5 Orlando 21 26 .447 51/2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 35 12 .745 — Chicago 26 21 .553 9 Detroit 26 23 .531 10 Indiana 25 23 .521 101/2 Milwaukee 20 30 .400 161/2 Monday's games Cleveland 111, Indiana 106, OT Detroit 105, Brooklyn 100 Memphis 110, New Orleans 95 Oklahoma City 114, Washington 98 Atlanta 112, Dallas 97 San Antonio 107, Orlando 92 Utah 105, Chicago 96, OT Denver 112, Toronto 93 Sacramento 111, Milwaukee 104 Tuesday's games Boston 97, New York 89 Houston 115, Miami 102 Toronto at Phoenix, (n.) Milwaukee at Portland, (n.) Minnesota at Lakers, (n.) Wednesday's games Atlanta at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Orlando at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Golden State at Washington, 5 p.m. New Orleans at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Miami at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Denver at Utah, 6 p.m. Chicago at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. LEADERS Through Monday SCORING AVERAGE G FG FT Pts Avg Curry, GOL 46 448 234 1351 29.4 Harden, HOU 50 408 442 1395 27.9 Durant, OKC 43 400 272 1170 27.2 Cousins, SAC 39 356 295 1052 27.0 James, CLE 46 434 229 1145 24.9 Lillard, POR 42 348 196 1016 24.2 Westbrook, OKC50 425 290 1198 24.0 DeRozan, TOR 48 377 334 1116 23.3 George, IND 48 353 277 1115 23.2 Davis, NOR 41 357 203 938 22.9 Butler, CHI 47 351 300 1055 22.4 Thomas, BOS 49 340 273 1053 21.5 K. Thmpsn, GOL 46 357 122 985 21.4 Anthony, NYK 44 333 212 937 21.3 Lowry, TOR 48 313 239 995 20.7 McCollum, POR 47 380 100 973 20.7 Wiggins, MIN 48 346 258 977 20.4 Lopez, Bro 49 394 202 990 20.2 Walker, CHA 48 333 215 968 20.2 Hayward, UTA 47 308 232 936 19.9 Leonard, SAN 46 328 169 910 19.8 Knight, PHX 42 309 122 827 19.7 Wall, WAS 46 335 162 896 19.5 Gallinari, DEN 43 235 291 832 19.3 Bosh, MIA 48 325 195 922 19.2 Jackson, DET 49 349 167 936 19.1 Paul, LAC 43 294 154 808 18.8 Wade, MIA 45 326 184 843 18.7 Gay, SAC 42 303 122 772 18.4 Millsap, ATL 49 309 217 873 17.8 Middleton, MIL 50 306 169 879 17.6 Nowitzki, DAL 45 284 143 787 17.5 Anderson, NOR 45 274 133 781 17.4 Drummond, DET 49 357 132 847 17.3 Okafor, PHL 42 309 107 725 17.3 Vucevic, ORL 44 338 59 736 16.7 Gasol, MEM 49 310 196 818 16.7 Gasol, CHI 45 301 140 751 16.7 Monroe, MIL 48 322 152 796 16.6 Towns, MIN 49 337 121 811 16.6 Redick, LAC 44 239 118 715 16.3 Love, CLE 47 258 144 758 16.1 Aldridge, SAN 44 291 127 709 16.1 Bryant, LAL 40 222 123 635 15.9 Ante..., MIL 48 289 170 761 15.9 Barton, DEN 49 277 131 763 15.6 Rose, CHI 41 262 83 631 15.4 Williams, LAL 47 201 246 720 15.3 Clarkson, LAL 48 284 110 727 15.1 Horford, ATL 50 322 63 757 15.1 FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE FG FGA Pct Jordan, LAC 198 277 .715 Whiteside, MIA 211 344 .613 Howard, HOU 209 344 .608 Kanter, OKC 235 424 .554 Faried, DEN 214 395 .542 Towns, MIN 337 626 .538 Gortat, WAS 226 420 .538 Drummond, DET 357 681 .524 Noel, PHL 186 355 .524 Lopez, NYK 189 362 .522 Monroe, MIL 322 617 .522 Favors, UTA 203 389 .522 Parker, SAN 226 434 .521 J. Hill, IND 180 349 .516 Antetokounmpo, MIL 289 567 .510 Griffin, LAC 281 553 .508 Young, Bro 329 648 .508 Durant, OKC 400 788 .508 Curry, GOL 448 886 .506 James, CLE 434 859 .505 Horford, ATL 322 641 .502 Leonard, SAN 328 653 .502 Warren, PHX 221 441 .501 Lopez, Bro 394 787 .501 Casspi, SAC 197 395 .499 Vucevic, ORL 338 680 .497 Aldridge, SAN 291 588 .495 Okafor, PHL 309 626 .494 Parker, MIL 212 430 .493 Ibaka, OKC 274 558 .491 3-POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE 3FG 3FGA Pct Redick, LAC 119 245 .486 Leonard, SAN 85 178 .478 Dudley, WAS 66 144 .458 Curry, GOL 221 490 .451 G. Hill, IND 80 183 .437 Casspi, SAC 83 190 .437 K. Thompson, GOL 149 344 .433 Dellavedova, CLE 64 148 .432 McDermott, CHI 62 144 .431 Olynyk, BOS 64 149 .430 Green, GOL 67 159 .421 Beverley, HOU 68 162 .420 Morrow, OKC 54 131 .412 Middleton, MIL 98 238 .412 Bayless, MIL 60 146 .411 Calderon, NYK 53 129 .411 Frye, ORL 47 115 .409 Teletovic, PHX 96 236 .407 Teague, ATL 55 137 .401 Anderson, NOR 100 250 .400 Thompson, PHL 80 201 .398 Beal, WAS 51 129 .395 Smith, CLE 105 266 .395 Parsons, DAL 61 155 .394 Nowitzki, DAL 76 194 .392 Bazemore, ATL 72 184 .391 Fournier, ORL 92 236 .390 McCollum, POR 113 291 .388 Barton, DEN 78 202 .386 Paul, LAC 66 171 .386 MEN'S TOP 25 FARED Tuesday 1. Oklahoma (19-2) beat TCU 95-72. 2. North Carolina (19-3) did not play. 3. Villanova (18-3) did not play. 4. Maryland (19-3) did not play. 5. Iowa (17-4) did not play. 6. Xavier (19-2) did not play. 7. Kansas (17-4) did not play. 8. Texas A&M (18-3) did not play. 9. Virginia (17-4) did not play. 10. Michigan State (19-4) did not play. 11. Providence (18-4) at DePaul, (n.) 12. SMU (19-2) did not play. 13. Iowa State (16-5) vs. No. 14 West Virginia, (n.) 14. West Virginia (17-4) at No. 13 Iowa State, (n.) 15. Baylor (17-5) did not play. 16. Oregon (18-4) did not play. 17. Miami (16-4) did not play. 18. Purdue (19-4) did not play. 19. Louisville (18-4) did not play. 20. Kentucky (16-6) lost to Tennessee 84-77. 21. Wichita State (16-5) did not play. 22. Indiana (18-4) at Michigan. 23. Arizona (17-5) did not play. 24. Dayton (18-3) did not play. 25. South Carolina (19-3) lost to Georgia 69-56. WOMEN'S TOP 25 FARED Tuesday 1. UConn (20-0) did not play. 2. South Carolina (21-0) did not play. 3. Notre Dame (21-1) did not play. 4. Baylor (21-1) did not play. 5. Maryland (20-2) beat Purdue 87-67. 6. Texas (20-1) did not play. 7. Ohio State (17-4) did not play. 8. Arizona State (18-4) did not play. 9. Oregon State (18-3) did not play. 10. Florida State (18-4) did not play. 11. Mississippi State (19-4) did not play. 12. Texas A&M (15-6) did not play. 13. Louisville (17-5) did not play. 14. UCLA (16-5) did not play. 15. Stanford (17-5) vs. California, (n.) 16. Miami (18-4) did not play. 17. Michigan State (16-4) did not play. 18. Kentucky (15-5) did not play. 19. South Florida (15-5) did not play. 20. Oklahoma (15-5) did not play. 21. Missouri (18-4) did not play. 22. Florida (18-4) did not play. 23. Tennessee (13-8) did not play. 24. Washington (16-5) did not play. 25. Oklahoma State (16-4) did not play. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 49 30 16 3 63 129 113 San Jose 48 26 18 4 56 142 129 Arizona 49 24 20 5 53 131 146 Anaheim 47 22 18 7 51 101 111 Vancouver 50 20 19 11 51 122 139 Calgary 48 21 24 3 45 126 146 Edmonton 50 19 26 5 43 122 149 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 53 33 16 4 70 147 122 Dallas 51 32 14 5 69 167 136 St. Louis 53 29 16 8 66 130 128 Colorado 52 27 22 3 57 143 142 Nashville 51 24 19 8 56 129 132 Minnesota 50 23 18 9 55 124 120 Winnipeg 50 22 25 3 47 129 145 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 50 30 15 5 65 140 110 Tampa Bay 49 27 18 4 58 130 117 Detroit 49 25 16 8 58 122 124 Boston 50 26 18 6 58 150 135 Montreal 51 24 23 4 52 138 138 Ottawa 51 23 22 6 52 144 161 Toronto 49 18 22 9 45 118 137 Buffalo 50 20 26 4 44 114 136 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 48 35 9 4 74 160 109 N.Y. Rangers 50 27 18 5 59 144 132 N.Y. Islanders 48 26 16 6 58 135 121 Pittsburgh 49 25 17 7 57 127 125 New Jersey 51 26 20 5 57 117 120 Carolina 51 23 20 8 54 123 135 Philadelphia 48 22 18 8 52 113 129 Columbus 51 19 27 5 43 133 163 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Monday's games No games scheduled Tuesday's games Toronto 4, Boston 3, OT New Jersey 3, N.Y. Rangers 2 N.Y. Islanders 5, Minnesota 3 Philadelphia 4, Montreal 2 Pittsburgh 6, Ottawa 5 Florida 5, Washington 2 St. Louis 1, Nashville 0 Dallas 5, Winnipeg 3 Chicago at Colorado, (n.) Columbus at Edmonton, (n.) Los Angeles at Arizona, (n.) San Jose at Anaheim, (n.) Wednesday's games Buffalo at Montreal, 4 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Carolina at Calgary, 6:30 p.m. Golf PGA TOUR STATISTICS Through Feb. 1 Scoring Average 1, Jordan Spieth, 69.18. 2, Kevin Na, 69.41. 3, Kevin Kisner, 69.44. 4, Jason Bohn, 69.62. 5, Jason Dufner, 69.69. 6, Fabian Gomez, 69.85. 7, William McGirt, 69.86. 8, Si Woo Kim, 69.86. 9, Ryan Palm- er, 69.88. 10, Brandt Snedeker, 69.89. Driving Distance 1, Bubba Watson, 320.9. 2, Adam Scott, 318.8. 3, Tony Finau, 317.9. 4, Gary Wood- land, 316.8. 5, Ryan Palmer, 315.3. 6, Dustin Johnson, 312.0. 7, Daniel Berger, 311.9. 8, Rory McIlroy, 311.5. 9, Jason Kokrak, 311.3. 10, 2 tied with 310.8. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1, Thomas Aiken, 77.44%. 2, Fred Funk, 76.79%. 3, Justin Leonard, 75.71%. 4, Bill Haas, 74.00%. 5, Kevin Kisner, 72.94%. 6, Graeme McDowell, 72.50%. 7, Emiliano Grillo, 71.48%. 8, K.J. Choi, 70.63%. 9 (tie), Jerry Kelly and Paul Casey, 70.00%. Greens in Regulation Pct. 1, Haotong Li, 80.00%. 2 (tie), Rory McIlroy and Russell Knox, 79.86%. 4 (tie), Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson and Branden Grace, 79.17%. 7, Jason Day, 78.70%. 8, Charl Schwartzel, 78.47%. 9, Jason Bohn, 78.36%. 10, Lucas Glover, 77.55%. Total Driving 1, Russell Henley, 58. 2, Emiliano Grillo, 68. 3, Kevin Kisner, 70. 4, Davis Love III, 74. 5, Paul Casey, 80. 6 (tie), Keegan Bradley and Scott Pinckney, 99. 8, Lucas Glover, 100. 9, Kevin Chappell, 102. 10, Hudson Swafford, 104. Putting Average 1, Steve Stricker, 1.618. 2, Jordan Spieth, 1.629. 3, Richard Lee, 1.655. 4, Kevin Kis- ner, 1.656. 5, Ryan Moore, 1.662. 6, Hao- tong Li, 1.667. 7, Rory Sabbatini, 1.680. 8, Andres Romero, 1.681. 9, Branden Grace, 1.684. 10, Kevin Na, 1.685. Birdie Average 1, Jordan Spieth, 6.38. 2, Haotong Li, 5.50. 3 (tie), Phil Mickelson and Kevin Kisner, 5.33. 5, Branden Grace, 5.25. 6, Dustin Johnson, 5.17. 7, Jason Dufner, 5.05. 8 (tie), Scott Hend, Kevin Na and Hideki Matsuyama, 5.00. Eagles (Holes per) 1, Adam Scott, 54.0. 2, Cameron Percy, 60.0. 3, Daniel Summerhays, 61.7. 4 (tie), Ryan Palmer and Rickie Fowler, 63.0. 6 (tie), Geoff Ogilvy and Patrick Rodgers, 66.0. 8, 5 tied with 72.0. Sand Save Percentage 1 (tie), Vaughn Taylor and Jordan Spieth, 100.00%. 3, Mark Wilson, 87.50%. 4, Da- vid Toms, 85.71%. 5, Scott Hend, 80.00%. 6, Rod Pampling, 76.92%. 7 (tie), Jerry Kelly, Hunter Mahan, Gonzalo Fdez- Castano and SSP Chawrasia, 75.00%. All-Around Ranking 1, Kevin Kisner, 198. 2, Kevin Na, 307. 3, Rickie Fowler, 312. 4, Ryan Palmer, 341. 5, Jordan Spieth, 351. 6, Justin Thomas, 365. 7, Sean O'Hair, 409. 8, Brendan Steele, 422. 9, David Lingmerth, 430. 10, Jason Dufner, 446. PGA TOUR Official Money Leaders 1, Kevin Kisner, (6), $2,350,032. 2, Brandt Snedeker, (6), 42,250,733. 3, Russell Knox, (7), $2,118,160. 4, Kevin Na, (6), $1,797,273. 5, Justin Thomas, (6), $1,734,873. 6, Smylie Kaufman, (8), $1,612,358. 7, Graeme McDowell, (4), $1,565,100. 8, Fabian Gomez, (6), $1,420,193. 9, Jason Dufner, (6), $1,380,025. 10, Jordan Spieth, (2), $1,353,750. FedExCup Leaders 1, Kevin Kisner, 1,073. 2, Brandt Snede- ker, 1,013. 3, Russell Knox, 929. 4, Kevin Na, 817. 5, Smylie Kaufman, 794. 6, Justin Thomas, 748. 7, Graeme McDowell, 732. 8, Fabian Gomez, 716. 9, Jason Dufner, 700. 10, Emiliano Grillo, 620. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Wednesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Charlotte OFF (OFF) Cleveland Atlanta 8 (207) at Philadelphia Indiana 7 (2001/2) at Brooklyn at Boston 4 (210) Detroit at OKC 13 (2111/2) Orlando Golden State 101/2 (2241/2) at Wash at Dallas OFF (OFF) Miami at San Antonio 121/2 (207) New Orleans at Utah 61/2 (195) Denver at Sacramento OFF (OFF) Chicago at Clippers 11 (207) Minnesota College Basketball Wednesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog Illinois 61/2 at Rutgers at Xavier 24 St. John's at Virginia 241/2 Boston College at Miami 51/2 Notre Dame at St. Joseph's 61/2 St. Bonaventure at Iowa 171/2 Penn St Va Cmmnwlth 14 at La Salle at Richmond 13 George Mason at N. Iowa 2 Evansville at Florida 9 Arkansas at Texas Tech 61/2 Oklahoma St at G W as h 7 Da vid so n at Villanova 121/2 Creighton at LoyCHICAGO 1 Illinois St at Seton Hall 71/2 Marquette Maryland 6 at Nebraska at Kansas 111/2 Kansas St at Wichita St 151/2 S. Illinois Mississippi 3 at Missouri Ar iz ona 1 1 at W as h. S t UC Irvine 31/2 at Cal Poly at Uc Riverside 5 CS Northridge Fresno St 61/2 at San Jose ST at Washington 5 Arizona St NHL Wednesday Favorite Line Underdog at Montreal OFF Buffalo at Tampa Bay -155/+145 Detroit at Calgary -120/+110 Carolina NFL SUPER BOWL 50 Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Carolina 51/2 (45) Denver Transactions BASEBALL American League Kansas City Royals: Agreed to terms with RHP Peter Moylan on a minor league contract. Los Angeles Angels: Agreed to terms with INF Sherman Johnson, LHP Tyler DeLoach, C Stephen McGee, C Michael Strentz, INF Alex Yarbrough, LHP Greg Mahle, C Taylor Ward, OF Chad Hinshaw, RHP Yunesky Maya, C Wade Wass, RHP Kyle McGowin and LHP Nate Smith to minor league contracts. Minnesota Twins: Agreed to terms with Of Carlos Quentin on a minor league contract. National League Arizona Diamondbacks: Agreed to terms with LHP Wesley Wright on a minor league contract. Los Angeles Dodgers: Named Greg Maddux and Raul Ibanez special as- sistants to the president of baseball operations and the baseball operations department. Milwaukee Brewers: Agreed to terms with LHP Chris Capuano on a minor league contract. New York Mets: Traded OF Darrell Ceci- liani to Toronto for cash. San Diego Padres: Agreed to terms with RHP Brandon Morrow on a minor league contract. Washington Nationals: Agreed to terms with INF Brendan Ryan on a minor league contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association Houston Rockets: Suspended Houston C Dwight Howard one game for striking the arm of a game official and fined Houston coach J.B. Bickerstaff $10,000 for public criticism of the officiating of Saturday's game. Women's National Basketball Association Minnesota Lynx: Re-signed C Sylvia Fowles and G Renee Montgomery. FOOTBALL National Football League Cincinnati Bengals: Signed RB Bronson Hill to a reserve/future contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League Anaheim Ducks: Recalled LW Harry Zolnierczyk from San Diego (AHL). Chicago Blackhawks: Recalled D Viktor Svedberg from Rockford (AHL). SOCCER Major League Soccer Portland Timbers: Transferred M George Fochive to Viborg FF (Superliga- Denmark). | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2016 2 B