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Hoyas run away from Demons

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Jessie Govan scored 25 points with 12 rebounds and Marcus Derrickson added 24 points as Georgetown fought off DePaul 90-81 to get its first Big East win of the season on Tuesday night.

Govan had nine of his 17 second-half points in the final 4:45, including four free throws in the final seconds to seal the win. He made 8-of-12 field-goal attempts and was 9 of 12 from the line.

Derrickson was 6 of 15 from the field, but made all 10 of his free-throw attempts. Jahvon Blair added 15 points for Georgetown (11-3, 1-2), which started the season 10-1. The Hoyas opened conference play with losses to Butler and Marquette.The Blue Demons made four more field goals than Georgetown, but the Hoyas outscored DePaul 31-14 from the free-throw line.The Hoyas were up 54-44 when Max Strus, who finished with 19 points, scored seven straight DePaul points to start a 16-7 run, capped by Marin Maric’s dunk, as the Blue Demons closed to 61-60 with 9:44 left. The Hoyas answered by scoring 11 points in a row to pull ahead 72-60.Maric and Tre’Darius McCallum had 18 points apiece for DePaul (7-8, 0-3).

Bulls let lead slip away,again, lose to Blazers in OT

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If C.J. McCollum finds a shot he likes, he won’t hesitate to take it.McCollum proved it Monday night when he scored 25 of his 32 points after halftime, including the tiebreaking basket with 56.5 seconds remaining in overtime, and the Portland Trail Blazers beat the  Bulls 124-120.Al-Farouq Aminu added a season-high 24 points and Evan Turner also had his season best with 22 for Portland, which was without leading scorer Damian Lilliard for a fifth straight game.Kris Dunn scored 22 points and Nikola Mirotic had 18 points off the bench for the Bulls, who blew a late lead for a second straight game. The Bulls lost for only the fourth time in 14 games since Mirotic returned to the lineup.Though he missed his first seven shots, McCollum was pivotal as Portland rallied from a six-point deficit in the final 2 1/2 minutes of the fourth quarter. McCollum scored the final four points in regulation to tie the score at 112 and answered after Lauri Markannen, who finished with 19 points, made a jumper from the corner that tied it at 120 with 1:14 left in overtime.McCollum then made his short floater and added a pair of late free throws.

Bears dismiss Fox, extend Pace.

LAKE FOREST—No shock in that John Fox was officially dismissed as Bears Head Coach by GM Ryan Pace.As the Bears try to recover from a decade of poor drafting by building a new foundation that’ll allow them to finally compete again in the crowded NFC North, they’ve decided to pace themselves on their march toward relevancy. Despite posting a 14-34 record in his three seasons as the Bears’ general manager and despite firing his first coaching hire, John Fox, earlier on Monday, Ryan Pace landed a contract extension that’ll keep him in Chicago through 2021.Pace will get his chance to see his plan through.Fox of course also had a 14-34 Coaching record, second worst winning percentage in Bears history, only to Abe Gibron.

“He’s earned the opportunity to see his plan to fruition,” Bears team president Ted Phillips told reporters a day after the Bears wrapped up a 5-11 season.

Pace isn’t losing any power either. He confirmed that he will be allowed to make the final decision on the Bears’ next coaching hire. Eagles QB coach John DeFilippo, Vikings OC Pat Shurmur, Panthers DC Steve Wilks emerge in the Bears’ Head Coaching search.Fox was never good with the media, and in fact walked out on his postgame media session in Minneapolis after two consecutive questions about his job security. He and Lovie Smith had THAT in common.

Irish rally past LSU on long TD pass to Tinley Park’s Boykin

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ORLANDO—Notre Dame receiver Miles Boykin lived up to Brian Kelly’s expectations.The Fighting Irish’s head coach told the junior during a practice leading up to Monday’s Citrus Bowl game against LSU that Boykin was going to win the MVP trophy.Boykin made not only one of the top plays of this bowl season but one of the more memorable catches in Notre Dame bowl history. He made a dynamic one-handed grab and raced down the sideline for a 55-yard touchdown with 1:28 remaining to give the 14th-ranked Fighting Irish a 21-17 victory over No. 16 LSU.The win by Notre Dame (10-3) is its first in a New Year’s Day bowl since the 1994 Cotton Bowl against Texas A&M and snaps a nine-game skid in January postseason games.

”He looked at me like I had two heads. But I felt like he had a chance,” said Kelly about his prediction. ”He’s got the ability, if we could get him the football. And Ian got him the football and Miles made a great individual play and, lo and behold, I’ve got the MVP sitting next to me.”

Boykin had only nine catches for 151 yards and a TD coming into the game, but he got his first start after starters Chase Claypool (shoulder injury) and Kevin Stephenson (suspension) were ruled out.Boykin showed off his wide-catch radius on what proved to be the game-winning play. On first-and-10 from the Irish 45, Ian Book lofted a pass up the right sideline that Boykin was able to snag with his right hand at the LSU 33, eluding corner Donte Jackson. Boykin then broke a tackle attempt by Donte Jackson at the LSU 26 before finding a clear path to the end zone.

”Ian put it in place where only I could reach it,” said Boykin, who finished with three receptions for 102 yards and a touchdown. ”It was a great pass and I was just lucky enough to pull it down on one hand. I’ve got pretty big hands.”

LSU coach Ed Orgeron said that Boykin made a great grab but lamented his defense’s other struggles on the play.

”We had our best cover guy on him (Jackson) but he’s a big receiver,” he said after the Tigers finished the season 9-4. ”We had two guys on him and missed the tackle. That’s what I’m mostly disappointed with.”

Book entered the game in the second quarter after Brandon Wimbush struggled moving the offense. The sophomore was 14 of 19 for 164 yards with two touchdowns and an interception.Book’s first touchdown came early in the fourth quarter. With Notre Dame trailing 14-6, he found Michael Young in the back of the end zone for a 6-yard score. Josh Adams then scored on a two-point conversion to tie it.

”It was an awesome opportunity, such a surreal moment that last play with Miles,” Book said. ”We knew it was going to be a close game. We just had to stay composed and do what we have been doing since January.”

The game lacked drama the first three quarters. It was scoreless until four seconds remained in the first half when a Justin Yoon 46-yard field goal gave Notre Dame a 3-0 halftime lead.LSU’s Danny Etling was 19 of 33 for 229 yards and a pair of second-half touchdowns to Derrius Guice. Guice, who was the MVP of last year’s game, had 98 yards on 21 carries. Kelly joins Knute Rockne, Ara Parseghian and Lou Holtz as the only Fighting Irish coaches to have three double-digit win seasons at the school.

Bears end another miserable season–no match for Vikings. Fox awaits fate.

MINNEAPOLIS—The Minnesota Vikings and their dominant defense can finally rest.They’ve made a convincing case they’re a strong contender for the Super Bowl that happens to be on their home turf.Latavius Murray rushed for 111 yards and two touchdowns , and the Vikings held the Bears to 86 total yards through three quarters on their way to wrapping up a first-round bye for the playoffs with a 23-10 victory over the Bears on Sunday.

”We wanted to finish this season off right,” Murray said.

Stefon Diggs caught six passes for 65 yards and a touchdown from Case Keenum for the Vikings (13-3), who reached 13 wins for only the second time in the history of the 57-year-old franchise after holding a second straight opponent without an offensive touchdown.

”You respect everybody who played the game and came before us,” Diggs said, ”but all those wins that we’ve had in the past, even today, they don’t matter anymore because it all could end.”

As long as this defense that entered the final regular-season game with the fewest points and yards allowed in the NFL this season is intact, the Vikings will be all the more likely to stick around.

”We’ve got a lot of good players. They understand the system and what their responsibility is, and they play very, very hard,” coach Mike Zimmer said. ”They’ve got this little edge about them right now, that they don’t want to give an inch.”

Mitchell Trubisky finished his rookie season with a turnover-free game, completing 20 of 36 passes for 178 yards. He failed, however, to guide the Bears (5-11) across the goal line despite 11 plays from the 10-yard line or closer in the fourth quarter.

”I just got more comfortable as the weeks went on,” Trubisky said. ”Just to play my game, be a leader on this team and help the offense grow and get better, but we’ve got to find a way to have a chance to win at the end of games.”

Trubisky also took a safety in the second quarter on an intentional grounding call when Danielle Hunter and Linval Joseph closed in on a sack in the end zone and he side-armed a throw between the two pass rushers.

”He just tossed it as if he was scared or something,” Hunter said.

Well, could you blame him?
”Nah!” Hunter said.Keenum said 13-3 had ”a nice ring to it.” The Vikings finished 12-2 four times with a 14-game schedule (in 1969, 1970, 1973 and 1975), but the only other time they’ve topped 12 victories was their 15-1 record in 1998.

”This place is crazy hard for teams to come in and play, especially with our defense. So I’m excited. I think this place is going to be rocking,” Keenum said.

In what could have been the final game for coach John Fox, who’s 14-34 in three seasons, the Bears didn’t cross midfield until the fourth quarter and totaled only 30 yards rushing. They were penalized 10 times for 116 yards and went 1 for 14 on third and fourth down conversions.Fox refused to address his status, leaving the podium in less than two minutes after a terse postgame news conference. The Bears are 1-5 against each of their three NFC North foes under Fox.

Hawks get a point, but still lose in OT to Flames

CALGARY—The recent promotion of Matthew Tkachuk onto Calgary’s No. 1 power-play unit is paying off.Tkachuk scored twice and Mark Giordano scored 52 seconds into overtime to lift the Flames over the Blackhawks 4-3 on Sunday night.Calgary’s power play was in a 2-for-31 slump when coach Glen Gulutzan made some personnel changes to his top unit on Thursday. One move was inserting Tkachuk into the role of net-front presence.The Flames have gone 3 for 8 with the extra man in the three games since, including a perfect 2 for 2 against the Hawks.Tkachuk gave Calgary a 2-0 lead at 4:42 of the second on a set play in which he got into open space and stuck his stick out, deflecting in Johnny Gaudreau’s pass.

”They’ve been working on that one play in practice and they just missed it the other night and they hit it tonight,” Gulutzan said.

In overtime, Mikael Backlund sent a pass back to the blue line where Giordano took a couple strides and fired a shot into the top corner on Jeff Glass. It helped Calgary salvage a win after Brandon Saad tied it with 1:46 left in the third period.Sean Monahan also scored for Calgary, which had lost five of seven home games. Mike Smith turned away 34 shots.Jordan Oesterle and Jonathan Toews also scored for the Blackhawks,who extend their points streak against Calgary to 16 games (10-0-6), a streak that dates to Feb. 2, 2013. Glass finished with 35 saves.

”We’ll take any point that we can get, but obviously we want to get both points especially at the position we’re in,” Saad said.

Toews and Saad also had an assist and each snapped six-game pointless streaks.Saad tied it with the goalie pulled. Toews won a faceoff back to Saad, whose quick shot deflected off the skate of Travis Hamonic and through Smith’s pads.”Goals are going to happen. You just have to find ways to make the saves at important times,” Smith said. ”Big goal by (Giordano) in overtime there and we go into the new year feeling good about ourselves.”

The Flames took a 3-0 lead 1:05 seconds later with Gaudreau again orchestrating the setup, this time to Monahan in front, who snapped his nine-game goalless drought.The Bears answered right back with two quick goals.Shortly after the Blackhawks’ power play expired, Oesterle’s point shot eluded Smith, who was completely screened by Ryan Hartman and did not move on it until it was coming back out of the net.Oesterle has goals in two straight games. He went the first 36 games his career without a goal until scoring in the 4-3 win over Edmonton on Friday.Fifty-six seconds later, Oesterle was in the middle of things again, his point shot was kicked out by Smith but Toews buried the rebound.With Corey Crawford (upper body) sidelined, Glass, a Calgary native, made his second-straight and second career start forthe Bears and was solid again.

NOTES—Backlund played in his 500th career game. … Andrew Mangiapane made his NHL debut for the Flames after being called up Sunday morning from Stockton (AHL). He played on the fourth line with Matt Stajan and Troy Brouwer. … Giordano played career game No. 712, moving into 6th place on the Flames all-time list.Play at the New York Rangers on Wednesday night.

Bulls fizzle late, fall to Wizards

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WASHINGTON—Bradley Beal delivered when the Wizards needed him most.Beal scored 17 of his 39 points in the fourth quarter to lead Washington to a 114-110 win over the Bulls on Sunday.Beal scored 15 straight points in the fourth as the Wizards rallied from an eight-point deficit early in the period. He also had nine rebounds and tied a career high with nine assists.

”I didn’t even know that,” Beal said when asked about his spurt. ”That’s just being in the zone, being locked in.”

Beal became the second player this year to have at least 39 points, nine rebounds and nine assists. Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook had 40 points, 14 rebounds and nine assists on Dec. 29.Beal has shown signs of taking his game to a new level this season. When backcourt mate John Wall was out with a knee injury, Beal had a career-high 51 points at Portland on Dec. 5, a night after the Wizards suffered a 47-point loss at Utah.

”He’s able to stay aggressive and still be hot and also make the right reads at the right times,” Wall said.

Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg said it was frustrating trying to defend Beal.

”We were trying to get it out of his hands there for a stretch,” Hoiberg said. ”But they did a good job finding him, seeking him out.”

Nikola Mirotic scored 21 points to lead the Bulls, who had won 10 of its previous 12. Kris Dunn had 19 points and 11 assists.David Nwaba’s two free throws with 1:26 to play gave the Bulls a 108-107 lead, and Dunn hit a jumper with 54 seconds remaining.Wall’s three-point play with 29.4 seconds left put the Wizards up 112-110. After Beal missed two free throws, Washington got the rebound and Wall added two free throws with 9.1 seconds to play.Wall had 21 points, nine assists, six rebounds and four blocked shots.The difference was 3-point shooting. Washington was 16 for 36 (44.4 percent) while the Bulls were 8 for 35 (22.9 percent). The Bulls missed 17 of 20 3-point attempts in the first half.

Cats start slowly, then beat Brown 73-55, McIntosh injured.

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ROSEMONT—Northwestern is now set for the resumtion of Big Ten Play after they rallied from a seven point hole to beat the Ivy League’s Brown Bruins 73-55. The Wldcats(10-5, 1-1)started slowly, and led 42-37 at halftime. Brown(6-6)started getting long range shots from guards Brandon Anderson(26 points) and Desmond Cambridge(22)who each had a trio of three point buckets. Brown’s largest lead was 55-48 with 15:30 to play, but a steal and dunk by Scottie Lindsey started the Cats on the comeback trail. Bryant McIntosh suffered-likely a knee injury which the extent of which was not yet known. NU finshed the rest of the game on a 47-18 run. The play inside from Dererk Pardon and Gavin Skelly game NU a big boost. Pardon led the Wildcats with 18 points and 8 rebounds, Lindsey had 14. McIntosh had 13 before the injury. Vic Law, back after missing the Oklahome game, and Anthony Gaines each contributed 11.

NOTES—The Wildcats resume Big Ten Play with Nebraska Tuesday night here at Allstate Arena…..Attendance was 6006.

LES

NU hold’s on against Kentucky in one of WORST officiated Bowl Games ever!

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NASHVILLE—Go ahead and question Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald’s decisions to go for it over and over on fourth down, even late in a move that nearly cost the Wildcats dearly.His defense had their coach’s back.The Wildcats broke up Kentucky’s 2-point conversion, and No. 20 Northwestern held off Kentucky 24-23 on Friday in a Music City Bowl that might be remembered more for injuries, ejections and a wild finish.

”I’m not sure words can describe that game,” Fitzgerald said. ”Wow. What a great job by our young men. We had to persevere through so much.”

Justin Jackson ran for 157 yards and two touchdowns as Northwestern (10-3) finished off back-to-back bowl wins in consecutive years for the first time in program history. The Wildcats notched their second 10-win season in three years and third in six under Fitzgerald. The senior class also won its 27th game for the best stretch in more than a decade.Both starting quarterbacks left in the first half with injuries, though Kentucky’s Stephen Johnson returned early in the third quarter. Kentucky lost running back Benny Snell Jr. to an ejection for contact with an official early in the second quarter, and NU lost leading tackler and linebacker Paddy Fisher before halftime when he was ejected for targeting.Kentucky (7-6) still had a chance to win after Fitzgerald tried to convert his fifth fourth down of the game only to turn it over for the fourth time on downs – this time at his own 39 with 2:31 left.

”Go for the win,” Fitzgerald said of his decision. ”We got it did you see the replay? I did. It is what it is, and somebody had to make a play. We went for the win right there.”

Johnson ran for his second TD of the second half with 37 seconds left. Kentucky coach Mark Stoops went for the 2-point conversion rather than play for overtime. Johnson couldn’t connect with Tavin Richardson on the pass. That cost Kentucky a chance at its best season since 2007 and a second straight bowl loss.

”We just lost a heartbreaker by inches,” Stoops said.

With quarterback Clayton Thorson knocked out early in the second with an injured right knee , Northwestern outran Kentucky 333-65. Safety Kyle Quiero provided the winning margin taking Northwestern’s second interception 26 yards for a TD with 7:49 left.Losing Jackson won’t be easy. He finished his career 10th among the NCAA’s leading rushers with 5,440 yards. But Jeremy Larkin is a redshirt freshman who ran for 112 yards, and he will be back in 2018. Thorson already planned to return for his senior season too. Fitzgerald said he told Jackson he’d better get a lot of yards.

”He’s coming for you, you know he’s coming for you,” Fitzgerald said.

Snell, who came in leading the SEC in rushing TDs, capped the opening drive of the game with a 3-yard TD that was his 19th this season and 32nd of his career. Both are school records, and he’ll be back for his junior season.Both teams lost key players in a wild second quarter. The Wildcats lost Snell when he was ejected with 13:01 left in for contact with referee Chris Coyte. Snell had just lost 7 yards on a run, and Coyte appeared to be trying to give Snell a hand up. Replays showed Snell perhaps pushing Coyte’s hands away as he got up. The referee then threw the flag immediately. Kentucky trailed 10-7 at the time.

”I was on top of the play,” Coyte told a pool reporter. ”And the player got up and grabbed my arms and pushed them away and contacted me. That’s a foul.”

Thorson hurt his right knee as he was tackled after making a 24-yard catch early in the second quarter. After handing off to Larkin, Thorson ran down the left sideline and was wide open for the catch before being tackled by Kentucky linebacker Jordan Jones. But Thorson, in his 38th career start, immediately grabbed at his right knee. He was carted off the field and replaced by senior Matt Alviti.Fitzgerald said Thorson will have an MRI exam when they return home.The Wildcats have to replace Jackson.

NOTES—The targeting Penalty callon Fisher on NU and the Touching an Official on Kentucky were horrible calls by over anxious Zebras. There were also some downright awful calls during the game too. Chris Coyte and his crew were from the Pac 12. 

Kane’s OT Goal gives Blackhawks 3-2 win in Edmonton

EDMONTON—Jeff Glass worked a long time for his NHL debut, playing 575 games for 11 teams ranging from the Western Hockey League to a stint in Russia.

”It’s something I’ve always dreamed of,” the 32-year-old said, ”but never thought it would actually come true.”

Now, he’s an NHL winner.Patrick Kane scored 50 seconds into overtime to give Glass a victory in his first game and lift the Blackhawks over the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 on Friday night.Kane deked around a defender then shoved in the rebound of his own shot past Cam Talbot. After scoring, he pointed toward the other end of the ice at Glass, and teammates quickly enveloped the journeyman goalie. The Calgary native made 42 saves.Glass is getting his shot after No. 1 goalie Corey Crawford went on injured reserve Wednesday with an upper body injury. Glass was recalled from the American Hockey League.

”Our star goalie is out, so my job is kind of to try to fill the gap right now,” Glass said. ”Tonight was just a step in the right direction.”

Hawk assistant captain Brent Seabrook was Glass’s roommate playing for Canada at the 2005 world junior championship, where the duo won gold.
”I didn’t really realize it was his first game. He’s 32,” Seabrook said with a laugh. ”I thought he would have played a couple. It was impressive to see.”

Ryan Hartman, Alex DeBrincat and Jordan Oesterle also scored for the Blackhawks, who snapped a three-game losing skid.Jesse Puljujarvi, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Leon Draisaitl scored for Edmonton, and Talbot stopped 32 shots.Puljujarvi’s power-play goal with 5:34 remaining in the first opened the scoring on Edmonton’s 17th shot on goal. The Blackhawks tied it with 55 seconds left in the first when Hartman swatted in a rebound.The Hawks took a 2-1 lead on the power play with six minutes left in the second as an Oilers miscue ended with DeBrincat putting a shot through Talbot’s legs for his 13th.The Blackhawks took a two-goal lead with another power-play goal at 8:28 of the third when Oesterle’s point shot hit the crossbar and caromed off Talbot’s back.Nugent-Hopkins scored with a shot off a defender with 2:19 left, and then Draisaitl got his 10th to tie it with 55 seconds left and Talbot pulled for an extra attacker.It was the second of three meetings between the teams this season. Edmonton beat the Hawks 2-1 in overtime on Oct. 19. … It was the first time this season the Oilers have had their projected six starting defenseman in the lineup at the same time.The Blackhawks are at Calgary on Sunday night