This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
D6


EZ SU COLLEGE FOOTBALL


Auburn is set to face Oregon in title game


Undefeated TCU


will have to settle for Rose Bowl appearance


BY STEVE YANDA Six years after being denied


entrance into the Bowl Champi- onship Series national title game after securing an unde- feated regular season record, Auburn performed the feat again. This time, the Tigers (13-0) were not the odd unbeat- en squad out. They’ll play Ore- gon (12-0) for the national championship Jan. 10 in Glen- dale, Ariz. “To navigate through a 12-


game season and to get through it undefeated is kind of special, and it’s something you can be really proud of,” Oregon Coach Chip Kelly said. “And now you get to go out and challenge yourself one more time against the best football team in the country.” Texas Christian (12-0) was the


jilted party this go-around. The Horned Frogs finished third in the final BCS standings released Sunday and will face Big Ten co-champion Wisconsin (11-1) in the Rose Bowl. TCU, a member of the Mountain West Confer- ence, also finished the regular season undefeated last year and was left out of the national title picture.


VirginiaTech (11-2), the Atlan-


tic Coast Conference victor, will square off against Stanford (11-1) — which finished fourth in the BCS standings — Jan. 3 in the Orange Bowl. The Hokies be- came the first team in division I-A history to lose their first two games of the season before win- ning 11 straight contests when they defeated Florida State, 44- 33, Saturday in the conference title game. On Sept. 11, Virginia Tech lost


to I-AA James Madison, 21-16, and became the second ranked squad ever to lost to an oppo- nent from a lower division of college football.Having fallen to Boise State the previous week during its season opener, Virgin- ia Tech’s prospects for respecta- bility this fall appeared bleak at that point. However, the Hokies re-


sponded by becoming the first team to go undefeated in ACC play. “I think we’ve got some great


character that really pulls us through,” Virginia Tech Coach Frank Beamer said. “To go back and did what we did after we had those two losses, most of that’s got to come from within the team, and that’s what it did with our football team. Because we have good character kids, that’s the reason I think we are where we are right now.” Ohio State (11-1) will take on Arkansas (10-2) in the Sugar Bowl, while Big 12 champion Oklahoma (11-2) will play Big East champion Connecticut (8-4) in the Fiesta Bowl. The BCS national title game


will feature two of the top six scoring offenses in the country. Oregon features incendiary sophomore tailback LaMichael James — the nation’s leading rusher—and an attack that has registered 37 or more points in all butonegamethis season.The Ducks defeated Oregon State, 37-20, on Saturday to claim the Pacific-10 championship. Such an accomplishment


would have seemed far less like- ly this past summer. Kelly threw Jeremiah Masoli — previously an all-Pacific-10 starting quar- terback — off the team in June after Masoli was charged with his second criminal offense in a six-month span. Kelly turned to DarronThom- as, who turned in a performance


Bowl schedule


NewMexico BYU vs. UTEP


Humanitarian Northern Illinois vs. Fresno State


NewOrleans Ohio vs. Troy


St. Petersburg Southern Mississippi vs. Louisville


Las Vegas Utah vs. Boise State


Poinsettia Navy vs. San Diego State


Hawaii Hawaii vs. Tulsa


Little Caesars Florida International vs. Toledo


Independence Air Force vs. Georgia Tech


Champs Sports West Virginia vs. N.C. State


Insight Missouri vs. Iowa


Military Bowl East Carolina vs. Maryland


Texas Illinois vs. Baylor


Alamo Oklahoma State vs. Arizona


Armed Forces Army vs. SMU


Pinstripe Kansas State vs. Syracuse


Music City North Carolina vs. Tennessee


Holiday Nebraska vs.Washington


Meineke Car Care South Florida vs. Clemson


Sun Notre Dame vs. Miami


Liberty Georgia vs. UCF


Chick-fil-A South Carolina vs. Florida State


TicketCity Northwestern vs. Texas Tech


Outback Florida vs. Penn State


Capital One Alabama vs. Michigan State


Gator Bowl Mississippi State vs. Michigan


Rose Bowl Wisconsin vs. TCU


Fiesta Connecticut vs. Oklahoma


Orange Stanford vs. Virginia Tech


Sugar Ohio State vs. Arkansas


GoDaddy.com Middle Tennessee vs. Miami (Ohio)


Cotton LSU vs. Texas A&M


BBVA Compass Pittsburgh vs. Kentucky


Kraft Fight Hunger Nevada vs. Boston College


BCS national championship Oregon vs. Auburn


Albuquerque University Stadium


Boise, Idaho Bronco Stadium


New Orleans Louisiana Superdome


St. Petersburg, Fla. Tropicana Field


Las Vegas Sam Boyd Stadium


San Diego Qualcomm Stadium


Honolulu Aloha Stadium


Detroit Ford Field


Shreveport, La. Independence Stadium


Orlando Florida Citrus Bowl


Tempe, Ariz. Sun Devil Stadium


Washington, D.C. RFK Stadium


Houston Reliant Stadium


San Antonio Alamodome


Dallas Gerald J. Ford Stadium


Bronx, N.Y. Yankee Stadium


Nashville LP Field


San Diego Qualcomm Stadium


Charlotte Bank of America Stadium


El Paso, Texas Sun Bowl


Memphis Liberty Bowl


Atlanta Georgia Dome


Dallas Cotton Bowl


Tampa Raymond James Stadium


Orlando Florida Citrus Bowl


Jacksonville, Fla. Municipal Stadium


Pasadena, Calif. Rose Bowl


Glendale, Ariz. U. of Phoenix Stadium


Miami Sun Life Stadium


New Orleans Louisiana Superdome


Mobile, Ala. Ladd-Peebles Stadium


Arlington, Texas Cowboys Stadium


Birmingham, Ala. Legion Field


San Francisco AT&T Park


Glendale, Ariz. U. of Phoenix Stadium


this fall that ranked him No. 21 in the nation in passing efficien- cy andNo. 34 in total offense. “It’s a quarterback-driven of-


fense,” Kelly said. “I think Dar- ron’s a perfect fit for what we do. But he was fortunate when he stepped into the job to have our top seven [offensive] linemen back from last year, all of our receivers back from last year. Obviously, LaMichael James be- ing back from last year. It’s a total team effort, but it’s a group of guys that really understands what we’re trying to accom- plish.” Led by quarterback Cam


Newton, Auburn thrashed South Carolina, 56-17, Saturday in the Southeastern Conference championship game to claim its first league crown since 2004. That season, the Tigers de-


feated Tennessee, 38-28, in the SECtitle game, which finalized a 12-0 regular season record. But Southern California and Okla- homa also were undefeated that year, and those were the squads that advanced to the BCS na- tional championship game. This year, Newton amassed


49 touchdowns this fall en route to becoming the third player in division I-A history to total at least 20 passing and 20 rushing touchdowns in the same season.


Dec. 18 2 p.m.


Dec. 18 9 p.m.


Dec. 21 8 p.m.


Dec. 22 8 p.m.


Dec. 23 8 p.m.


Dec. 24 8 p.m.


Dec. 27 5 p.m.


Dec. 28 10 p.m.


Dec. 29 6 p.m.


Dec. 30 Noon


ESPN


Dec. 18 5:30 p.m. ESPN


ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN ESPN


Dec. 26 8:30 p.m. ESPN


ESPN2


Dec. 28 6:30 p.m. ESPN


ESPN


Dec. 29 2:30 p.m. ESPN


ESPN


Dec. 29 9:15 p.m. ESPN


ESPN


Dec. 30 3:20 p.m. ESPN


Dec. 30 6:40 p.m. ESPN


Dec. 30 10 p.m.


Dec. 31 Noon


Dec. 31 2 p.m.


ESPN ESPN CBS


Dec. 31 3:30 p.m. ESPN


Dec. 31 7:30 p.m. ESPN


Jan. 1 Noon


Jan. 1 1 p.m.


Jan. 1 1 p.m.


Jan. 1 5 p.m.


Jan. 1 8:30 p.m.


ESPNU ABC ESPN


Jan. 1 1:30 p.m. ESPN2


ESPN


ESPN/ ESPN3D


Jan. 3 8:30 p.m. ESPN


Jan. 4 8:30 p.m. ESPN


Jan. 6 8 p.m.


Jan. 7 8 p.m.


Jan. 8 Noon


Jan. 9 9 p.m.


Jan. 10 8:30 p.m.


ESPN STANDINGS FOX EASTERNCONFERENCE ESPN ESPN


ESPN/ ESPN3D


“There were moments; I


won’t say there was one mo- ment, you know, where we were just like, ‘Wow, he’s the guy,’ ” Auburn CoachGene Chizik said. “But there were several mo- ments when we just said, ‘Look, this guy is going to be different than most.’ ” Newton’s amateur status


came into question over the past month due to actions taken by his father, Cecil. The NCAA re- newed Newton’s eligibility Wednesday, one day after Au- burn had ruled him ineligible. The school found that Cecil Newton had attempted to gain $200,000 in payment fromMis- sissippi State boosters in return for his son’s athletic services. Cecil Newton’s solicitation


was a violation of NCAA rules, but the organization deter- mined that the player himself had been unaware of his father’s plan. “He’s just solid; he’s a guy that


really doesn’t flinch,”Chizik said of Cam Newton. “No matter what is out there and what is circulating and all of the other distractions — I guess I should say potential distractions — he just doesn’t really deal with those, and he has that innate ability to focus.” yandas@washpost.com


SOUTHEAST W L OL PTS. GF GA Washington Tampa Bay Atlanta Carolina Florida


ATLANTIC W L OL PTS. GF GA Pittsburgh


Philadelphia


N.Y. Rangers 16 12 New Jersey


8 16 2 18 49 79 N.Y. Islanders 5 15 5 15 53 83


NORTHEAST W L OL PTS. GF GA Montreal Boston Ottawa Buffalo Toronto


WESTERNCONFERENCE CENTRAL


Detroit Chicago


Columbus Nashville xSt. Louis


17 8 2 36 71 53 14 8 3 31 72 50 12 14 2 26 61 81 11 13 3 25 68 73 9 12 4 22 54 72


W L OL PTS. GF GA 17 4 3 37 84 62 15 12 2 32 90 84 14 10


1 29 67 69


12 8 5 29 63 65 12 9 4 28 64 70


NORTHWEST W L OL PTS. GF GA xVancouver Colorado


Minnesota Edmonton Calgary


PACIFIC Dallas


Phoenix


Los Angeles Anaheim San Jose


14 7 3 31 78 61 13 10 3 29 91 82 11 11 4 26 63 76 10 12 4 24 70 93 11 14 2 24 74 82


W L OL PTS. GF GA 16 8 13 7


1 33 74 66 6 32 74 72


15 10 0 30 69 61 13 13 3 29 71 87 12 9 4 28 73 71


x-Late game One point awarded for overtime losses.


SATURDAY’SRESULTS


Toronto 3, Boston 2 (SO) Buffalo 1 (OT)tawa 0 (SO) Florida 2, Phoenix 1 (SO) Philadelphia 5, New Jersey 3 Montreal 3, San Jose 1 Atlanta 3,Washington 1 Pittsburgh 7, Columbus 2 Tampa Bay 6, Colorado 5 Nashville 5, Carolina 2 Dallas 4, Minnesota 3 (OT) Edmonton 2, St. Louis 1 (OT) Los Angeles 3, Detroit 2 (OT)


SUNDAY’SRESULTS


Philadelphia 3, N.Y. Islanders 2 Ottawa 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Chicago 4, Calgary 2 Phoenix 3, Anaheim 0 St. Louis at Vancouver, Late


MONDAY’SGAMES


Toronto atWashington, 7 New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7 Nashville at Atlanta, 7 Dallas at Columbus, 7 San Jose at Detroit, 7:30


TUESDAY’SGAMES KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES CamNewton will lead top-ranked Auburn againstNo. 2 Oregon on Jan. 10 in Glendale, Ariz.


Buffalo at Boston, 7:30 Ottawa at Montreal, 7:30 Colorado at Florida, 7:30 Tampa Bay at Calgary, 9:30 Anaheim at Edmonton, 9:30


18 8 2 38 92 74 15 9 3 33 84 94 14 10 3 31 85 78 11 12 3 25 75 84 11 14 0 22 64 66


18 8 2 38 89 66 17 7 4 38 95 69 1 33 83 77


FLYERS3,ISLANDERS2 Danny Briere scored the tiebreak-


ing goal with 5:44 left as Philadelphia improved to 3-0 against New York this season.


PHILADELPHIA ........................ 1 N.Y. ISLANDERS ...................... 0


FIRST PERIOD


Scoring: 1, Philadelphia, Carle 1 (Meszaros, Richards), 13:42.


THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 2, N.Y. Islanders, Sim 1 (Parenteau, Schremp), 5:12. 3, N.Y. Islanders, Nielsen 3 (Eaton), 5:48. 4, Philadelphia, Nodl 7 (Meszaros, Giroux), 11:34 (pp). 5, Philadelphia, Briere 14 (Leino, Hartnell), 14:16.


SHOTS ON GOAL PHILADELPHIA ........................ 8


N.Y. ISLANDERS ...................... 4 9 15


10 — 27 11 — 30


Power-play opportunities: Philadelphia 1 of 4; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 4. Goalies: Philadelphia, Bobrovsky 14-4-2 (30 shots-28 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Roloson 2-11-1 (27-24). A: 7,773 (16,234). T: 2:22.


BLACKHAWKS4,FLAMES2 Dave Bolland scored two power-


play goals and Chicago overcame the loss of star Patrick Kane (88 points last season) in the first minute.


CALGARY ................................. 2 CHICAGO .................................. 3


FIRST PERIOD


Scoring: 1, Chicago, Bickell 5 (Campbell), 4:14 (pp). 2, Chicago, Bolland 2 (Toews, Seabrook), 10:21 (pp). 3, Calgary, Iginla 11 (Bourque, Bouwmeester), 13:06 (pp). 4, Calgary, Babchuk 4 (Giordano, Morrison), 16:28 (pp). 5, Chicago, Toews 12 (Kopecky, Seabrook), 17:33 (pp).


THIRD PERIOD


Scoring: 6, Chicago, Bolland 3 (Seabrook, Keith), 19:45 (en-pp).


SHOTS ON GOAL CALGARY ................................. 8


CHICAGO ................................ 13 8 11


10 — 26 8 — 32


Power-play opportunities: Calgary 2 of 8; Chicago 4 of 9. Goalies: Calgary, Kiprusoff 9-13-1 (31 shots-28 saves). Chicago, Crawford 7-4-0 (26-24). A: 21,112 (19,717).


STARS4,WILD3(OT)


Late Saturday Stephane Robidas scored a power-


MINNESOTA ....................... 0 DALLAS .............................. 1


1 1


2 1


FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1,DAL, Skrastins 1 (Ott, Segal), 3:42.


SECONDPERIOD Scoring: 2, DAL, Ott 6 (Neal, Lehtonen), 11:45 (pp). 3, MIN,Miettinen 7 (Koivu), 17:34.


THIRDPERIOD Scoring: 4,MIN, Kobasew2 (Clutterbuck, Cullen), 1:41. 5, DAL, Burish 3 (Daley, Segal), 5:57. 6, MIN, Havlat 7 (Zidlicky,Bouchard), 16:51.


OVERTIME Scoring: 7,DAL,Robidas 3 (Ribeiro,Richards), 3:37 (pp).


SHOTSONGOAL MIN ..................................... 7 DAL ..................................... 7


15 9


9 13


0 — 31 4 — 33


Power-play: MIN 0-3; DAL 2-6. Goalies: MIN, Theodore 3-4-1 (33-29).DAL, Lehtonen 13-7-1 (31-28).A: 14,344.


KINGS3,REDWINGS2(OT)


Late Saturday Anze Kopitar scored 4:04 into over-


time for Los Angeles. DETROIT ............................ 1


LOS ANGELES .................... 0 SECOND PERIOD


Scoring: 2, Los Angeles, Williams 10 (Scuderi, Kopitar), :24. 3, Detroit, Bertuzzi 5 (Franzen), 1:12. 4, Los Angeles, Martinez 2 (Harrold, Williams), 7:18.


OVERTIME


Scoring: 5, Los Angeles, Kopitar 10 (Brown, Martinez), 4:04.


SHOTS ON GOAL DETROIT .......................... 10


LOS ANGELES .................... 5


8 8


10 10


1 — 29 2 — 25


Power-play opportunities: Detroit 0 of 2; Los Angeles 0 of 2. Goalies: Detroit, Osgood 2-2-1 (25 shots-22 saves). Los Angeles, Quick 13-5-0 (29-27). A: 18,118 (18,118). T: 2:27.


1 2


0 0


FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1, Detroit, Ericsson 2 (Datsyuk), 15:29.


0 — 2 1 — 3


play goal at 3:37 of overtime to lift Dallas to its sixth straightwin.


0 — 3 1 — 4


0 0


0 — 2 1 — 4


0 0


2 — 3 2 — 2


SENATORS3,RANGERS1 ChrisKelly scored all three goals for


Ottawa, including the tiebreaking tally late in the thirdperiod of theSenators’ victory overNewYork.Kelly snapped a 1-1 tie off a feed from Jarko Ruutu in front of the right post.


OTTAWA .................................. 0 N.Y. RANGERS ......................... 0


SECOND PERIOD


Scoring: 1, Ottawa, Kelly 4, 4:27 (sh). 2, N.Y. Rangers, Prust 3 (Boyle, Girardi), 10:50 (sh).


THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3, Ottawa, Kelly 5 (Ruutu, Kuba), 17:36. 4, Ottawa, Kelly 6, 19:59 (en).


SHOTS ON GOAL OTTAWA ................................ 10


N.Y. RANGERS ......................... 5 8 13


7 — 25 8 — 26


Power-play: Ottawa 0 of 1; N.Y. 0 of 4. Goalies: Ottawa, Leclaire 2-6-1 (26 shots-25 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lun- dqvist 11-10-1 (24-22). A: 18,200 (18,200). T: 2:17.


COYOTES3,DUCKS0 Ilya Bryzgalov shut out his former


team for the third time since leaving Anaheim and Shane Doan connected during a power play to lead Phoenix.


PHOENIX .................................. 1 ANAHEIM ................................ 0


SECOND PERIOD


Scoring: 2, Phoenix, Doan 2 (Yandle, Whitney), 17:23 (pp).


THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 3, Phoenix, Stempniak 8 (Fiddler), 17:04 (en).


SHOTS ON GOAL PHOENIX ................................ 16


ANAHEIM .............................. 10


16 11


7 — 39 5 — 26


Power-play opportunities: Phoenix 1 of 6; Anaheim 0 of 3. Goalies: Phoenix, Bryzgalov 11-4-6 (26 shots-26 saves). Anaheim, Hiller 11-11-2 (38-36). A: 14,062 (17,174). T: 2:28.


PANTHERS2, COYOTES1 (SO)


Late Saturday Scott Clemmensen stopped 40


shots, and Michael Frolik scored in regulation and in the fifth round of a shootout for the Panthers.


FLORIDA ............................ 0 PHOENIX ............................ 0


1 1


0 0


0 — 2 0 — 1


SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 1, FLA, Frolik 5 (Booth), 10:21. 2, PHX, Hanzal 7 (Whitney, Yandle), 16:04 (pp).


SHOOTOUT FLA 3 (Santorelli G, Reinprecht NG, Weiss G, Booth NG, Frolik G), PHX 2 (Stempniak NG, Vrbata G, Upshall G, Whitney NG, Korpikoski NG).


SHOTS ON GOAL FLORIDA............................. 8


PHOENIX .......................... 11


16 12


7 13


6 — 37 5 — 41


Power-play: FLA 0 of 4; Phoenix 1 of 3. Goalies: FLA, Clemmensen 2-4-0 (41-40). PHX, Bryzgalov 10-4-6 (37-36). A: 10,334. T: 2:29.


OILERS2,BLUES1 (OT) Late Saturday Taylor Hall scored the winning goal


23 seconds into overtime as Edmon- ton extended its winning streak to four by beating St. Louis.


ST. LOUIS ........................... 0 EDMONTON ....................... 0


THIRD PERIOD


Scoring: 1, Edmonton, Jones 6 (Paajarvi, Gagner), 2:32. 2, St. Louis, Brewer 4 (Johnson, Crombeen), 13:33.


OVERTIME Scoring: 3, Edmonton, Hall 9 (Whitney), :23.


SHOTS ON GOAL ST. LOUIS ........................... 9


EDMONTON ....................... 7


15 9


8 9


0 — 32 1 — 26


Power-play opportunities: St. Louis 0 of 1; Edmonton 0 of 1. Goalies: St. Louis, Halak 10-7-3 (26 shots-24 saves). Edmonton, Khabibulin 6-10-1 (32-31). A: 16,839 (16,839). T: 2:19.


0 0


1 1


0 — 1 1 — 2


1 0


1 — 3 0 — 0


FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1, Phoenix, Pyatt 4 (Lepisto, Schlemko), 10:59.


1 1


2 — 3 0 — 1


BY GENEWANG Call it lethargy, a funk, a bout of


misfortune or whatever other hard-luck account comes to mind. By any name, theWashing- ton Capitals over the past two games just haven’t been able to catch a break, and it’s not as if they haven’t had their moments. They’ve had plenty, in fact, to the tune of 84 shots, including a regu- lation season-high 46 in Satur- day’s 3-1 loss to the Atlanta Thrashers. That’s what makes these con-


secutive defeats all themoreexas- perating. Despite Washington sending the puck to the net fre- quently, the production that usu- ally accompanies one of Coach Bruce Boudreau’s prime direc- tives has been in short supply. Discontent was free-flowing in


the locker room atVerizon Center following the most recent let- down, with players lamenting a second straight game in which a combination of intrepid goalten- ding and unfavorable bounces conspired against the reigning Presidents’ Trophy winners, dropping them out of sole posses- sion of first place in the Eastern Conference. “You look at our team, and we


haven’t scored a lot of goals late- ly,” Boudreau said, referring not only toSaturday’s result but also a 2-1 loss to Dallas on Thursday. “I think it’s the lack of commitment to paying the price to score.We’re all wanting to score, but we’re staying on the perimeter hoping to get the puck rather than being the guy that’s going to the puck.” Even when players are being


proactive in that regard, the re- sults have been anything but en- couraging. Right wing Eric Fehr, for instance, had multiple looks from close range against Thrash- ers goalie Ondrej Pavelec, only to have a breakaway and an ensuing rebound in the third period turned aside. Fehr, who had five shots against Atlanta, has not scored in seven consecutive games and has one goal over his past 14.


TONI L. SANDYS/THE WASHINGTON POST Coach Bruce Boudreau wants his Caps “paying the price to score.”


CAPITALS’NEXTTHREE vs. Maple Leafs Tonight, 7 Comcast SportsNet


vs. Panthers Thursday, 7 Comcast SportsNet, Versus


vs. Avalanche Saturday, 7 Comcast SportsNet


Radio: WFED (820 AM, 1500 AM) Defenseman Mike Green had


six shots against the Thrashers, and he, too, went without a point, although Pavelec was especially sturdy in stopping 45 shots. Green is without a goal in his past eight games and has scored once in his past 12. Left wing Jason Chimera, meantime, also took six shots without scoring. Even when the Capitals have


held a man advantage, the payoff has been minimal. Washington went 0 for 5 on the power play against Atlanta after converting 1 of 3 against the Stars. “If you look at the power play,


we’d have everybody just all in a circle looking to take one-timers, and then there was no second- shot capability,” Boudreau said.


“Usually when we’ve got the puck at the point, we have a guy going to the net, but we have options. [Against Atlanta], I was looking, andwhenthey’regetting thepuck at the point, they were in the half wall.Everybodywasjust standing around hoping something was going to happen.” The recent scoring swoon pro-


voked enough apprehension that Boudreau required a practice on Sunday morning rather than give the players a day to rest before facingTorontoonMondayatVeri- zon Center. “We’re getting chances,” said


Fehr, disregarding the suggestion that perhaps unsettled line com- binationscouldberesponsible for the lack of productivity. “It’s not like we’re not getting pucks to the net. At the end of the day, if guys are shooting pucks, it doesn’t matter who your linemates are. You’ve got a good opportunity, you’ve got to try to beardownand put it in.” Capitals notes: Defenseman


TomPoti (groin) said he was opti- mistic that he might return to the Capitals’ lineup against Toronto but that he needed to waitandsee how he felt onMonday. . . . Defenseman John Erskine,


who missed Saturday’s game against Atlanta, took part in prac- tice and said he was ready to go. wangg@washpost.com


KLMNO HOCKEY Caps rue their missed chances


In back-to-back losses, 84 shots have yielded only two goals


MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2010


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60