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D10


EZ SU PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL NFL players’ union expected to file collusion case The labor deal between the BY MARK MASKE The NFL Players Association


is likely to file a collusion case against teamowners in the com- ing days, sources said Sunday. The case will accuse teams of


conspiring to restrict players’ salaries last offseason, the sourc- es said. It is not clear howmany teams will be named in the union’s case, the number of play- ers who will be cited as affected by the alleged collusion or the amount of damages sought.


league and the union prohibits a team from entering “into any agreement, express or implied” with the NFL or another team “to restrict or limit” players’ salaries or contract negotiations between a teamand a player. Specific details of the union’s


claimwere not available Sunday. People familiar with research for the case have said in recent months that the unionwas look- ing into a lack of activity in the restricted free agentmarket last offseason.


The filing of the collusioncase


by the union would come with the league and union in the middle of protracted negotia- tions over an extension of their labor agreement, which expires in March. League and union officials declined to comment Sunday. Asked in October about the


possibility of the union filing a collusion case, NFL Commis- sioner Roger Goodell said: “That’s not my decision. Their litigation strategy is their litiga- tion strategy. We’re focused on


trying to get a collective bar- gaining agreement and negoti- ating.” The case must be filed this


week to meet a deadline under the sport’s collective bargaining agreement. The labor deal says that a collusion case must be filed within 90 days “of the time when the player knows or rea- sonably should have known” that he has a claim, or within 90 days of the first game of the season, whichever is later. This season began Sept. 9. maskem@washpost.com


COLLEGE BASKETBALL


MEN-BB&TCLASSIC


NO. 18 FLORIDA 67, AMERICAN U. 48 Florida


Min


Tyus ....................... 23 Parsons .................. 34 Macklin .................. 22 Boynton ................. 32 Walker ................... 33 Young ....................... 6 Wilbekin ................. 14 Yeguete ................. 10 McClanahan ............. 2 Prather ..................... 5 Murphy .................. 19


Min FG


5-8 5-7 5-9 0-9 5-7 0-0 1-1 1-1 0-0 0-1 3-8


FG


Moldoveanu ........... 39 5-16 Lumpkins ............... 32 Brewer ................... 33 Hendra ................... 38 Luptak .................... 21 McCormack .............. 9 Munoz .................... 17 Simon II .................... 2 Fisher ....................... 3 Grafft ....................... 1 Wroblicky ................. 5


Totals ................... 200 19-44


FT O-T A PF Pts. 4-4 1-3 3 2 14 2-3 5-8 4 2 13 2-3 0-4 0 3 12 0-0 0-1 7 0 0 2-2 0-2 0 1 16 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 0-0 0-1 2 0 3 0-0 1-4 0 1 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 1-1 0-3 1 2 7


Totals ................... 200 25-51 11-13 8-28 18 13 67 American U.


3-7 6-8 4-8 1-2 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1


FT O-T A PF Pts. 3-4 2-5 0 2 14 0-0 2-8 2 3 6 3-4 0-2 0 3 17 0-1 1-3 4 1 9 0-0 0-3 2 3 2 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 0-0 0-1 2 0 0 0-0 0-1 1 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 0-0 1-1 0 0 0 6-9 7-26 11 15 48


Florida ........................................... 30 American U. ................................... 21


37 —67 27 —48


FLORIDA—Percentages: FG .490, FT .846. Three-Point Goals: 6-17, .353 (Walker 4-6, Wilbekin 1-1, Parsons 1-2, Murphy 0-2, Boynton 0-6). Team Rebounds: 1. Blocked Shots: 3 (Macklin 2, Murphy). Turnovers: 10 (Walker 3, Wilbekin 2, Parsons 2, Tyus, Prather, Murphy). Steals: 10 (Parsons 3, Walker 2, McClanahan, Prather, Wilbekin, Yeguete, Tyus). AMERICAN U.—Percentages: FG .432, FT .667. Three- Point Goals: 4-15, .267 (Brewer 2-4, Hendra 1-1, Moldoveanu 1-9, Luptak 0-1). Team Rebounds: 2. Blocked Shots: 3 (Lumpkins 2, Moldoveanu). Turnovers: 17 (Munoz 3, Luptak 3, Hendra 2, Moldoveanu 2, Brewer 2, Lumpkins 2, Wroblicky, Simon II, McCormack). Steals: 1 (Wroblicky). A: NA.


NAVY 64, GEORGEWASHINGTON 57


Navy (4-6) Garcia 1-6 2-2 5, Veazey 3-6 1-1 7, Brown 2-6 3-4 9, Roberts 1-3 0-1 3, Avworo 2-4 5-8 10, Wyatt 1-1 0-0 3, Loupos 0-1 0-0 0, Wynn 0-0 0-0 0, Sugars 8-13 0-0 20, Avila 2-4 2-6 7. Totals 20-44 13-22 64. George Washington (2-5) Pellom 4-6 2-3 11, Mikic 0-4 1-2 1, Katuka 1-2 2-3 4, Taylor 3-15 2-5 8, Bynes 4-12 2-4 11, Smith 2-4 6-7 10, Fitzgerald 1-3 0-0 3, Guest 2-4 0-0 4, Ware 1-5 2-2 4, Johnson 0-2 1-2 1, Warren 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 18-58 18-28 57.


Halftime: Navy 31-27. Three-point goals: Navy 11-25 (Sugars 4-8, Brown 2-6, Wyatt 1-1, Garcia 1-2, Roberts 1-2, Avworo 1-2, Avila 1-3, Loupos 0-1), George Wash- ington 3-22 (Pellom 1-2, Fitzgerald 1-3, Bynes 1-6, Johnson 0-1, Mikic 0-3, Taylor 0-7). Fouled out: Garcia. Rebounds: Navy 37 (Avila 8), George Washington 38 (Pellom 13). Assists: Navy 12 (Avworo, Garcia 4), George Washington 13 (Taylor 7). Total fouls: Navy 23, George Washington 23. A: NA.


ANDY KING/ASSOCIATED PRESS Quarterback Brett Favre left the game on the first series with a sprained shoulder, and Tarvaris Jackson led the Vikings to 38 points.


Vikings: No Favre, no problem 38 14


With Jackson in charge, Minnesota improves to 2-0 under Frazier


BY DAVE CAMPBELL


minneapolis — Brett Favre’s consecutive games played streak could be in trouble again, with his unparalleled 20-year career probably down to the final four weeks. The NFL’s all-time iron man


sprained his throwing shoulder severely enough Sunday that he didn’t even try to talk his way back into the game. Still, at age 41 with Minnesota essentially out of playoff contention, Favre wasn’t ready to declare himself done for good. The Vikings, with new life


under interim coach Leslie Fra- zier, haven’t conceded yet either. Tarvaris Jackson threw two


touchdown passes to Sidney Rice in relief afterFavrewashurt on the first series, Adrian Peter- son rushed for three touch-


VIKINGS BILLS


the game away before halftime. Jackson finished 15 for 22 for 187 yards, plus tworuns for 22 yards. So what’s the story for next


downs on a sprained ankle and the Vikings rolled over the Buffa- lo Bills, 38-14. “Can you be effective if you


play?” was the question Favre said he’ll ask himself next week. “If the answer is yes, if I think I can, I would love to play and see this through.” Without all-pro left guard


Steve Hutchinson (thumb) or standout wide receiver Percy Harvin (illness), the Vikings (5-7) outgained the Bills, 387- 239, and turned Frazier’s first home game since replacing the fired Brad Childress into a fun time under the roof on a frigid afternoon outside. Jackson threw three intercep-


tions but after Drayton Florence returned the first one for a touchdown, he led the Vikings to touchdowns on their next four possessions for a 28-7 lead to put


Sunday’s game against the play- off-chasingNewYork Giants? “No quarterback controversy,”


Frazier said. Favre had a sprained sterno-


clavicular joint in his throwing shoulder diagnosed.TheSCjoint is located where the collarbone meets the breastbone. An X-ray showed no broken bones and he is scheduled to have an MRI exam on Monday. If Favre is healthy, he’ll make his NFL-re- cord 298th straight start. “Hopefully that’ll be the case,


but we’ll wait and see what hap- pens,” Frazier said. Since Frazier, who inter-


viewed for the Bills’ coaching position last winter that went to Chan Gailey, was promoted from defensive coordinator, the Vi- kings defense has given up only two touchdowns and 455 total yards over two games. Peterson, who was listed as questionable this week and


BASEBALL Werth signs 7-year deal with Nats nationals from D1


Nationals, from moving to build- ing a farm system to expecting to win. Werth, the Nationals be- lieve, will replace Dunn's offense while providing above-average defense in right field and leader- ship in the clubhouse. “He'll be a centerpiece of our


ballclub on the field and in the clubhouse,” Rizzo said. “It kind of exemplifies Phase 2 of the Washington Nationals' process. Phase 1 was a scouting-and-play- er development, build-the-farm- system type of program.We feel that we're well on our way of doing that.We feel that now, it's the time to go to this second phase and really compete for division titles and champion- ships.” Werth leaves a team, the Phil-


lies, that has done that routinely, going to the playoffs four straight years, advancing to two World Series and winning one. Werth was undaunted by play- ing for Washington, in part be- cause of a meeting with the Lerner family.


“I think in a short time, we’re


going to surprise a lot of people,” Werth said. “I’ve been given a lot of assurance by the Lerner fami- ly and by Mike that we’re going to go after some guys that are going to make a difference, that are going to put this team where it needs to be. . . . I came here to win.” In signingWerth, the Nation-


als took a substantial risk. Werth’s contract will run until the 2018 season, at which point


he will be turning 39. Rizzo believesWerth will continue im- proving as he enters his mid-30s, whichwouldbuck a trend deeply established in baseball history. Rizzo also acknowledged that a team with theNationals' reputa- tion, having lost 298 games in three seasons, sometimes must pay more than more successful competitors. And so the Nation- als paid more than anyone ex- pected. “I think anyone is a little uncomfortable with giving any- one a seven-year deal,” Rizzo said. “But we're in a position with the Washington Nationals at this place and this time that we have to do a little bit more than the championship-caliber, win-today teams. I think that it's kind of a two-fold process.Some- times you have to give the years to get the player. We feel, with that said, this is the type of guy to give a long-term deal with. He takes such good care of his body. Our evaluators have seen him improve the last three years to a point wherewestill his best days are still ahead of him." Some around the game


thought the contract was exces- sive. “It makes some of our con-


tracts look pretty good,” Mets General Manager Sandy Alder- son told New York reporters. “That's a long time and a lot of money. I thought they were try- ing to reduce the deficit inWash- ington.” Werth’s addition also spreads


the influence of superagent Scott Boras on the franchise. Werth


one when you have a relation- ship with them.We've done sev- eral deals in the past. We know each other's style. We know which buttons to push and which buttons not to push.” Werth, Rizzo said, entered the


LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Outfielder JaysonWerth, who will turn 32 inMay, will make an average of $18 million per season with theNationals through 2017.


joins first overall draft picks Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper as Boras clients who have signed recent megadeals with the Nationals. Boras also represents a handful of other Nationals players and free agent first baseman Carlos Pena, whom the Nationals could sign to replace Dunn at first base. Werth hired Boras this sum-


mer, and “right off the bat we were talking about possible suit- ors. The Nationals were at the top of the list.” “TheLernersandIdon't share


Thanksgiving dinner,” Boras said. “But we've shared a lot of dinners lately, that’s for sure.” Said Rizzo: “It's always more comfortable dealing with some-


offseason as the Nationals’ prime free agent target. Rizzo scouted Werth in Springfield, Ill., when Werth was a high schooler, and even back then Rizzo loved Werth’s athleticism. When Werth played for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Riggleman was the team’s bench coach, and he gave Rizzo a rousing recom- mendation. On plane rides this season,


when talk between Rizzo and Riggleman drifted to potential free agents, Werth’s name kept coming up.Whenitcametime to sign him, the Nationals did all they could—if you add up all the money theWashington/Montre- al franchise spent on free agents the past 20 years, it would fall short of Werth’s contract by roughly $4 million. “It makes a statement that it’s


not always aboutmoney,” Riggle- mansaid. “We were criticized for not bringing Adam Dunn back, and there were a lot of com- ments that it was about money. Well, obviously, it’s not about money, because we just gave more money. The Lerners have been doing everything they can. This puts an exclamation point on it.” Said Rizzo: “It’s a lot ofmoney.


It’s a lot of years. We feel this is the start of something.” kilgorea@washpost.com


looked a little gimpy during pre- game warmups, pounded the league’s most porous run de- fense for 107 yards on 16 carries including a 43-yard scamper for a score. Frazier said the decision on


whether to play the all-pro was “real close,” but Jackson just laughed — saying “he’s not hu- man, man” — when asked how his teammate was able to heal so quickly after getting hurt last week. “I was brainwashing myself


the whole week, putting it inmy mind that, ‘I’mgoing to play, I’m going to play, I’mgoing to play,’ ” Peterson said. Although the Bills (2-10) have


been vastly improved over the lastmonthor so, they reverted to early-season form and suffered another blowout. They turned the ball over five times and had three personal foul penalties. “Obviously I didn’t do a good


job of preparing our football team for what they were getting into coming in here,” Gailey said. —Associated Press


WOMEN


NO. 22 MARYLAND 81, APPALACHIAN ST. 65 Appalachian St. (6-2) Sharkey 0-4 0-0 0, A. Freeman 4-11 1-2 12, Dewart 6-13 2-2 15, Ramirez 5-15 1-2 15, C. Freeman 1-7 0-0 2, Weldon 3-5 0-0 6, Edwards 3-8 5-6 11, Southworth 0-0 0-0 0, Williams 1-3 2-3 4. Totals 23-66 11-15 65. Maryland (7-1) Tchatchouang 6-9 5-7 17, Thomas 6-9 1-1 13, Kizer 6-13 0-0 12, Barrett 3-6 1-2 8, Cloud 1-2 6-8 8, Mincy 2-7 0-0 4, Taylor 0-1 1-2 1, DeVaughn 3-7 3-6 9, Hawkins 4-6 1-2 9, Rodgers 0-7 0-0 0. Totals 31-67 18-28 81. Halftime: Maryland 39-38. Three-point goals: Appala- chian St. 8-23 (Ramirez 4-11, A. Freeman 3-6, Dewart 1-4, Sharkey 0-1, C. Freeman 0-1), Maryland 1-10 (Barrett 1-3, Taylor 0-1, Mincy 0-2, Rodgers 0-4). Fouled out: Edwards, C. Freeman. Rebounds: Appalachian St. 37 (Edwards 13), Maryland 50 (DeVaughn 13). Assists: Appalachian St. 15 (Edwards, A. Freeman 3), Maryland 13 (Barrett 3). Total fouls: Appalachian St. 21, Maryland 14. A: 3,952.


KLMNO


MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2010 SCOREBOARD GOLF


CHEVRONWORLD CHALLENGE At Sherwood Country Club in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Yardage: 7,052 yards; Par: 72, Purse: $5 million FINAL


x-won on first hole of playoff $1,200,000


x-Graeme McDowell, ......... 66 69 68 69 — 272 $650,000


Tiger Woods, ..................... 65 66 68 73 — 272 $400,000


Paul Casey, ........................ 73 65 69 69 — 276 $300,000


Rory McIlroy, ..................... 66 70 73 68 — 277 $225,000


Hunter Mahan, ................... 72 67 70 69 — 278 $205,000


Stewart Cink, ..................... 69 75 68 67 — 279 Ian Poulter, ........................ 72 67 71 69 — 279 $190,000


Luke Donald, ...................... 70 66 73 74 — 283 $182,500


Zach Johnson, .................... 75 67 70 72 — 284 Sean O'Hair, ....................... 72 67 70 75 — 284 $175,000


Jim Furyk, .......................... 72 73 71 72 — 288 $170,000


Steve Stricker, ................... 72 76 70 71 — 289 $165,000


Nick Watney, ..................... 72 67 71 80 — 290 $157,500


Camilo Villegas, ................. 70 75 76 70 — 291 Bubba Watson, .................. 76 69 74 72 — 291 $147,500


Dustin Johnson, ................. 69 72 80 71 — 292 Anthony Kim, ..................... 79 66 74 73 — 292 $140,000


Matt Kuchar, ...................... 75 71 74 75 — 295 NEDBANK GOLF CHALLENGE SCORES


At Gary Player Country Club in Sun City, South Africa Purse: $5 million; Yardage: 7,590 FINAL


Lee Westwood, Eng...... 68-64-71-68 — Tim Clark, S. Africa....... 73-67-68-71 — R. Goosen, S. Africa ...... 72-70-70-68 — M. A. Jimenez, Spain .... 69-69-71-71 — Ernie Els, S. Africa ........ 71-68-71-73 — Ross Fisher, England .... 67-68-73-75 — R. Allenby, Australia..... 70-70-73-72 — P. Harrington, Ire. ......... 66-72-72-75 — Justin Rose, England .... 70-72-72-72 — A. Hansen, Denmark..... 72-70-68-76 — E. Molinari, Italy ........... 71-67-73-76 —


LPGA


TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP At Grand Cypress Golf Club in Orlando, Fla. Purse: $1.5 million; Yardage: 6,518; Par: 72 FINAL


$225,000


Maria Hjorth, ..................... 72 68 71 72 — 283 $137,860


Amy Yang, ......................... 67 70 73 74 — 284 $88,686


In-Kyung Kim, .................... 73 73 70 70 — 286 Cristie Kerr, ....................... 71 71 71 73 — 286 $56,608


Na Yeon Choi, ..................... 73 71 73 70 — 287 Laura Diaz, ......................... 74 71 69 73 — 287 $36,041


Mariajo Uribe, .................... 73 70 76 71 — 290 Beatriz Recari, ................... 74 72 72 72 — 290 Angela Stanford, ............... 73 72 73 72 — 290 Ilhee Lee, ............................ 75 70 72 73 — 290 $24,215


Sandra Gal, ........................ 75 73 74 69 — 291 Suzann Pettersen, ............. 73 73 73 72 — 291 Song-Hee Kim, ................... 71 73 74 73 — 291 Se Ri Pak, ........................... 74 69 74 74 — 291 Morgan Pressel, ................. 73 69 74 75 — 291 Katherine Hull, .................. 72 70 74 75 — 291


HIGHSCHOOLS


BOYS' BASKETBALL DISTRICT Dunbar 82, Bell 72 PRIVATE Sidwell Friends 54, Takoma Academy 52 OTHERS Cesar Chavez 59, Pallotti 48 GIRLS' BASKETBALL PRIVATE Wakefield School vs. Garrison Forest at Garrison Forest OTHERS McNamara 46, McDonough 36


LOCALCOLLEGES COLLEGEFOOTBALL


NO. 25HAWAII59,UNLV21 Late Saturday


UNLV ........................................ 7 0 0 14 — 21 HAWAII .................................. 14 17 14 14 — 59


Haw: Pollard 33 pass from Moniz (S.Enos kick), 6:56 first. UNLV: Mi.Johnson 60 pass from Clayton (Kohorst kick), 5:22 first. Haw: Moniz 4 run (S.Enos kick), 3:28 first. Haw: Moniz 1 run (S.Enos kick), 12:08 second. Haw: FG S.Enos 25, 6:45 second. Haw: Green 1 run (S.Enos kick), 6:14 second. Haw: Salas 22 pass from Moniz (S.Enos kick), 9:32 third. Haw: Pilares 3 pass from Moniz (S.Enos kick), 4:17 third. Haw: Salas 54 pass from Moniz (S.Enos kick), 14:12 fourth. UNLV: Payne 9 pass from Clayton (Kohorst kick), 4:06 fourth. Haw: Heun 3 run (S.Enos kick), 1:29 fourth. UNLV: Trotter 4 pass from Herring (Kohorst kick), :16 fourth. A: 37,820 fourth.


UNLV


First Downs ......................................... 18 Rushes-Yards ................................. 31-92 Passing .............................................. 203 Comp-Att-Int ............................... 17-29-3 Return Yards ........................................ 17 Punts-Avg. ..................................... 6-37.7 Fumbles-Lost ...................................... 2-0 Penalties-Yards ................................ 5-32 Time Of Possession ........................ 27:23


RUSHING


UNLV: Cornett 14-36, Trotter 7-34, Herring 2-16, Clay- ton 8-6. Hawaii: Green 15-136, Moniz 5-29, Dimude 5- 16, Heun 1-3, Bradley 1-2, Team 1-(minus 3).


PASSING


UNLV: Clayton 14-25-3-182, Herring 3-4-0-21. Hawaii: Moniz 29-43-1-380, Rausch 2-3-0-43.


RECEIVING UNLV: Payne 6-84, Mi.Johnson 3-76, Knutson 2-21, Trotter 2-8, Vidal 1-7, Mays 1-5, Cornett 1-1, Sullivan 1-1. Hawaii: Pilares 9-157, Pollard 7-95, Salas 5-94, Bradley 5-35, Tinoco 2-43, Green 2-(minus 5), Blount 1- 4.


HAWAII 25


28-183 423


31-46-1 86


2-45.5 1-0


7-85 32:37


WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Delaware 60, Navy 55 George Washington 67, George Mason 58


SOCCER


NCAAWOMEN'S DIVISIONITOURNAMENT


CHAMPIONSHIP


In Cary, N.C. Notre Dame 1, Stanford 0


NCAAMEN'S DIVISIONITOURNAMENT SEMIFINALS


FRIDAY, DEC. 10 AT SANTA BARBARA, CALIF.


North Carolina vs. Louisville, 8:30 Akron vs. Michigan, 11 CHAMPIONSHIP


SUNDAY, DEC. 12 AT SANTA BARBARA, CALIF. North Carolina-Louisville winner vs. Akron-Michigan winner, 4


TENNIS DAVISCUP


FINAL At Belgrade Arena in Belgrade, Serbia Surface: Hard-Indoor SERBIA 3, FRANCE 2 SINGLES


Gael Monfils, France, def. Janko Tipsarevic, Serbia, 6-1, 7-6 (4), 6-0; Novak Djokovic, Serbia, def. Gilles Simon, France, 6-3, 6-1, 7-5. DOUBLES


Arnaud Clement and Michael Llodra, France, def. Nenad Zimonjic and Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 3-6, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 7-5, 6-4.


REVERSE SINGLES


Novak Djokovic, Serbia, def. Gael Monfils, France, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4; Viktor Troicki, Serbia, def. Michael Llodra, France, 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.


-5 -4 -2


-2 -1


-1


+2 +2 +2 +2


+3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3


271 279 280 280 283 283 285 285 286 286 287


-16 -16 -12 -11 -10 -9


-9 -5 -4


-4 E


+1 +2 +3


+3 +4


+4 +7


FINALBCS STANDINGS HARRIS POLL COACHES' POLL CPU RANK Rk.Team


1.Auburn 2.Oregon 3.TCU


4.Stanford 5.Wisconsin 6.Ohio St.


7.Oklahoma 8.Arkansas


9.Michigan St. 10.LSU


11.Boise St. 12.Missouri


13-0 12-0 12-0 11-1 11-1 11-1 11-2 10-2 11-1 10-2 11-1 10-2


13.Virginia Tech 11-2 14.Oklahoma St. 10-2 15.Nevada 16.Alabama


17.Texas A&M 18.Nebraska 19.Utah


12-1 9-3 9-3


10-3 10-2


20.South Carolina 9-4 21.Mississippi St. 8-4 22.West Virginia 23.Florida St. 24.Hawaii


9-3 9-4


25.Cent. Florida


10-3 10-3


2 1437 .9742 1 1450 .9831 3 1348 .9139 5 1239 .8400 4 1276 .8651 6 1200 .8136 T8 1008 .6834 T8 1008 .6834 7 1104 .7485 12 826 .5600 10 914 .6197 14 712 .4827 11 900 .6102 13 718 .4868 15 640 .4339 18 521 .3532 17 542 .3675 16 607 .4115 19 375 .2542 20 345 .2339 22 255 .1729 21 261 .1769 23 156 .1058 25


98 .0664 24 143 .0969 BCS


W-L Rk. Pts. Pct. Rk. Pts. Pct. Rk. Pct. Pct. 1 2809 .9856 2 2773 .9730 3 2613 .9168 5 2421 .8495 4 2443 .8572 6 2293 .8046 9 1926 .6758 8 1992 .6989 7 2104 .7382 11 1625 .5702 10 1800 .6316 13 1368 .4800 12 1623 .5695 15 1232 .4323 14 1302 .4568 16 1155 .4053 18 1077 .3779 17 1136 .3986 19 685 .2404 20 631 .2214 22 500 .1754 21 519 .1821 23 274 .0961 24 191 .0670 25 190 .0667


WASHINGTONPOST.COM/SPORTS


1 1.000 .987 2 .960 .972 3 .900 .910 5 .820 .837 8 .690 .804 9 .680 .766 4 .830 .730 6 .800 .727 11 .590 .692 7 .720 .617 12 .580 .610 10 .620 .528 18 .330 .503 13 .550 .490 16 .410 .434 14 .540 .433 15 .500 .415 17 .370 .393 t19 .270 .255 t19 .270 .242 21 .200 .183 24 .040 .133 22 .140 .114


Pv. 1 2 3 4 5 6 9 7 8


10 11 12 15 14 17 16 18 13 20 19 22 24 21


23 .100 .078 NR 28 .000 .054 NR


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