01.28.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance

1oneAh, right. The Super Bowl. Version 53.
One thought is to give you 53 links to stories you should read going into the one labeled LIII.
Such as: L.A. Times editorial writer David Ulin has made a case for why one shouldn’t watch. It can be compelling for those who struggle with the impact big-time sports has on society.
Now you shuffle the deck now and come up with the other 52 reasons, a bit more uplifting, to see if there’s a need to witness the Rams’ attempt to capture their first Los Angeles-based championship in the Super Bowl cycle of games.
Such as, if you really want to dumb down the Rams-New England Patriots matchup – Sunday, 3:20 p.m., Channel 2, with Jim Nantz and Tony Romo – there are plenty of outlets willing to help. Like, the Rams …

This Rams-Pats meetup actually circles back to some to Super Bowl XXXVI some 17 years ago, when Tom Brady led a 20-17 win over the Rams, then representing St. Louis, at the Louisiana Superdome. The last Super Bowl played in Atlanta was in 2000, when Kurt Warner (and Dick Vermeil) threw for 414 yards and led the Rams, just five years removed from Anaheim, over Tennessee (and Jeff Fisher) 23-16 for the franchise’s one and only title. The key play: A 73-yard touchdown pass to Isaac Bruce with 1:54 left. The real key play: The Rams’ Mike Jones tackled Kevin Dyson inside the 1 as time expired.
Also this week: Pro Football Hall of Fame announcements included in the “NFL Honors” show (Saturday, 9 p.m., Channel 2) Continue reading “01.28.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance”

01.21.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance

1oneIt’s not your imagination. The NBA, at least this season, is content on capitalizing on national holidays to highlight the current incarnation of the Lakers in games against the two-time defending champion Golden State Warriors. National TV, too. It’s not unnoticed that the team’s second meeting of the 2018-19 season caps off the annual Martin Luther King Day national TV day (at Staples Center, 7:30 p.m., TNT).
So, will LeBron James play? It would be fitting. He was injured during the first Lakers-Warriors meeting in Oakland – way back on Christmas Day – and he hasn’t seen the court since as the Lakers have seen some highs and lows in going 5-8 in his absence. James had 17 points and 13 rebounds in 21 minutes in that first meeting, but he was gone by the end of the third quarter with his now famous groin strain. Somehow, the Lakers pulled out a head-turning 127-101 triumph by outscoring the Warriors 36-19 in the fourth quarter, as a result of Kyle Kuzman (19 points), Ivica Zubac (18 points, 11 rebounds, a plus-25) and Rajon Rondo (15 points, 10 assists off the bench with a plus-24). Golden State shot just 9 for 36 from three-point range, with Steph Curry (minus 9) and Kevin Durant (minus 11) combining for just five of 16. The Lakers had lost seven in a row to the Warriors and 11 in a row in Oakland. Wipe that all clean.
If you’re keeping track on this holiday theme, the next Lakers-Warriors meeting after this burrows its way into Groundhogs Day – Saturday, Feb. 2, at Oakland, an ABC contest. The last of the four regular-season encounters is April 4 (at Staples Center, on TNT), which, from our limited research ability, is known as National Burrito Day (always the first Thursday in April).
Also worth noting: Monday’s Lakers-Warriors game will be an opportunity for fans to interact with NBA referees standing by on Twitter to answer questions. Fans can tweet @OfficialNBARefs or use the hashtag #RefWatchParty to rattle their cages.
The rest of the Lakers’ schedule this week:
* At Staples Center vs. Minnesota, Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet and TNT
* At Staples Center vs. Phoenix, Sunday at 6:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
As for the Clippers, three games on the road could be problematic before coming home.
The Clippers this week:
* At Dallas, Tuesday at 5:30 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Miami, Wednesday at 4:30 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Chicago, Friday at 5 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Staples Center vs. Sacramento, Sunday at 12:30 p.m., Prime Ticket
Also on MLK Day:
* Oklahoma City at New York, 9:30 a.m., NBATV
* Orlando at Atlanta, noon, NBATV
* New Orleans at Memphis, 2:30 p.m., TNT
* Houston at Philadelphia, 5 p.m., TNT Continue reading “01.21.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance”

01.14.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance

1oneIt seemed inevitable there’d be a Rams-Saints rematch somewhere in the NFC playoffs after witnessing their Week 9 encounter at New Orleans. Back then, the Rams’ eight-game win streak covering September and October to open the season came to a halt on that first weekend in November when Drew Brees threw for 346 yards and four TDs without a pick during a 45-35 triumph, extending the Saints’ wins tream at the time to seven straight.
Lessons learned from that one: Don’t doubt Michael Thomas, the 25-year-old, third-season receiver out of Ohio State who set a franchise record with 211 yards on 12 catches, capped by a game-changing 72-yard TD reception. He celebrated by pulling a flip phone out of the field-goal padding and reprised a celebration last seen by the Saints’ Joe Horn in 2003. The Saints finished off the deal with P.J. Williams broke up a fourth-down pass from Jared Goff (28 of 40 passing, 391 yards, three TDs, one INT) to Brandin Cooks. “We love it. You find out about yourself when you have a little bit of adversity,” Rams coach Sean McVay said afterward. “I know that everybody in that locker room is going to respond the right way. Sometimes setbacks can be setups for comebacks — and that’s the way we look at it.” So that sets up this NFC Rams-Saints title game, Sunday at 12:05 p.m. at the Superdome on Channel 11.
In the Saints’ 20-14 win over Philadelphia in Sunday’s NFC divisional playoff contest, Thomas pulled in a 2-yard TD reception to give his team its first lead of the game. It came at the end of an 18-play, 92-yard drive that ate up nearly 11 ½ minutes. Thomas finished with 12 receptions for 171 yards, targeted 16 times, more than twice as many as anyone in the game.
The Rams and Saints have one game against each other in NFL playoff history – the Rams of St. Louis with Kurt Warner and Marshall Faulk lost a 31-28 decision against the Aaron Brooks-led Saints at the Superdome in the 2000 wildcard round despite 21 fourth-quarter points.
The Rams-Saints contest comes before the AFC championship game – New England at Kansas City, Sunday at 3:40 p.m., Channel 2.
Need anything else on that one? Ask a Chargers fan.

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1twoThe latest ESPN bracketology breakdown/guess at the field of 68 for the men’s college basketball tournament allows for only two Pac-12 teams — Arizona and Arizona State – compared to the 10 that could possibly represent from the Big 10 (out of 12) or eight others from the ACC. Heck, the West Coast Conference is on par to have two teams as well at this point. It’s not just ESPN; others in this prognostication game believe the Pac-12 is too talentless to have more than a pair of entries. Before USC and UCLA are allowed to measure up against the Wildcats and Sun Devils next weekend (Jan. 24-26) for their one-and-only meetings of the regular season, the Trojans and Bruins conduct their first of two regular-season faceoffs at the Galen Center (UCLA at USC, Saturday, 1 p.m., Channel 2) for what seems to be some cannibalization as they both try to strengthen their resumes with nearly the same records. Continue reading “01.14.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance”

01.07.19: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance

1oneIf you digested the projection of the NFL playoffs made by CBS Sports’ Will Brinson just after the regular season ended, you might be amused to see a Chargers-Saints Super Bowl matchup set for early February, and Philip Rivers hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. That’s all still alive after the previous wildcard weekend. But Brinson only got the two AFC games tagged right. Neither of his NFC wildcards came up right.
As a result, Los Angeles will have a rooting interest on both Saturday and Sunday when the divisional round comes into place.
For the record, the final eight lays out:
Saturday:
* Indianapolis at Kansas City, Channel 4, 1:30 p.m., Channel 4
* Dallas at Rams, Coliseum, Channel 11, 5:15 p.m., Channel 11
Sunday:
* Chargers at New England, Channel 2, 10 a.m., Channel 2
* Philadelphia at New Orleans, Channel 11, 1:40 p.m., Channel 11

What to know about the Chargers: They are 8-1 on the road this season, 8-0 when not in L.A. (the only road loss at the Coliseum to the Rams in Week 3), with wins in Seattle, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Denver and Baltimore (not to mention, London). Yet a road team hasn’t won a playoff game in Foxborough, Mass., in six years. A matchup of the 37-year-old Rivers and 41-year-old Tom Brady sets a record for their combined age in a playoff setting. What isn’t old news is that it should be pretty darn cold in New England this time of year. Weather.com says it’ll be snow showers with a high of 30 degrees and a low of 15.
What to know about the Rams: The Cowboys are just 3-5 away from home. But according to insiders at InsideTheStar.com, a less-than-edgy Cowboys’ fan site, the Eagles’ win over the Bears in the wildcard round that sends the Cowboys to L.A. is an outcome that is “arguably better for Dallas.” Meaning, they go to the No. 2 seed instead of the No. 1 seed New Orleans, even though Dallas had a Week 13 upset win over the Saints. “The prospect of a rematch with the Saints in the Superdome was not appealing. (The upset) would have been tough to duplicate. Not only that, but the Rams lost some steam to close the regular season. Their defense, despite featuring Aaron Donald, is one of the lesser groups in the league overall. And if you have a choice between Drew Brees and Jared Goff in an elimination game, then is there really much to debate?” Not really. At least we know Jerry Jones won’t really change his expression one outcome or another.

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1twoAnd the 2019 College Football Playoff champion will be … let’s check the resumes and see … ah, Alabama and Clemson. Again. It’s the fourth season in a row the two programs have met in this post-season format. The Crimson Tide play its fourth straight title game and seventh in the past 10 seasons. It has a 5-1 mark in its past six appearances — the lone loss coming to Clemson, of course. And somehow coach Nick Saban can claim a record-setting seventh national title. Clemson’s Dabo Swinney has his own little dynasty rolling. Enjoy the main event Monday on ESPN at 5 p.m. with Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit, plus a “MegaCast” breakdown: The “Field Pass” with Adam Amin and Steve Levy on the sidelines (ESPN2), the “Monday Night Film Room” with Joe Tessitore, Jason Whitten, Booger McFarland and Todd McShay instead of the Coaches’ Film Room (ESPNEWS), a “Command Center” with split-screens and shots of the coaches with info graphics (ESPNU), “Sounds of the Game” with no broadcasters (ESPN Classic), a production on the SEC Network called “Thinking Out Loud” with Greg McElroy, Marcus Spears and Alyssa Lang yucking it up, the ESPN Deportes feed, and more on ESPN3 with options of watching the “BlimpCast” through the Goodyear Blimp above Levis Stadium in Santa Clara or the “TechCast” with a mix of vantage points that includes cameras attached to referees, pylons and an even higher SkyCam above the field.
Someone must be watching all this through rose-colored glasses.

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1threeThere is some value in both UCLA and USC owning 2-0 records after the first weekend of Pac-12 conference basketball play. The Bruins posted 92 and 98 points in wins over Stanford and Cal, the first time they’ve exceeded 90 points since the first three games of the season against. ahem, Purdue-Fort Wayne, Long Beach State and St. Francis. The Trojans haven’t started conference 2-0 since 2010.
The downside: As both are still 9-6 overall, it’ll take some doing to pretty themselves up by March. Now let’s ship them off to Oregon against the Ducks (9-5, 0-1) and Beavers (9-4, 1-0) and see if they sink or dog paddle.
For UCLA (9-6, 2-0):
* At Oregon, Thursday at 6 p.m., ESPN/ESPN2
* At Oregon State, Sunday at 7 p.m., FS1
For USC (9-6, 2-0):
* At Oregon State, Thursday at 8 p.m., ESPNU
* At Oregon, Sunday at 5 p.m., ESPNU
For the other Southern California teams:
* Loyola Marymount (13-3, 1-1 WCC) vs. St. Mary’s, Gersten Pavilion, Saturday at 7 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
* Pepperdine (8-8, 1-1 WCC) at Santa Clara, Thursday at 8 p.m.; at San Diego, Saturday at 1 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
* Long Beach State (6-10) begins Big West play vs. UC Davis, at the Walter Pyramid, Saturday at 4 p.m., ESPN3
* Cal State Northridge (6-10) starts Big West play at UC Riverside, Wednesday at 7 p.m., ESPN3; at Cal Poly, Saturday at 7 p.m., BigWest.TV.
Games of national interest:
* Tuesday: Duke at Wake Forest, 4 p.m., ESPN; Texas A&M at Kentucky, 4 p.m., SEC Network; St. John’s at Villanova, 4 p.m., FS1; Oklahoma at Texas Tech, 6 p.m., ESPNEWS; North Carolina at North Carolina State, 6 p.m., ESPN; Alabama at LSU, 6 p.m., SEC Network.
* Wednesday: Georgetown at Xavier, 3:30 p.m., FS1; Auburn at Mississippi, 4 p.m., ESPN2; Arizona State at Cal, 6 p.m., Pac-12 Net; TCU at Kansas, 6 p.m., ESPN2; San Jose State at Nevada, 8 p.m., CBSSN; Arizona at Stanford, 8 p.m., Pac-12 Net.
* Thursday: Washington State at Colorado, 6 p.m., Pac-12 Net; Washington at Utah, 7 p.m.; Pacific at Gonzaga, 8 p.m., ESPN2.
* Friday: Indiana at Maryland, 4 p.m., FS1; Purdue at Wisconsin, 6 p.m., FS1.
* Saturday: Louisville at North Carolina, 9 a.m., ESPN; Providence at Georgetown, 9 a.m., FS1; Mississippi at Mississippi State, 10 a.m., Channel 2; Duke at Florida State, 11 a.m., ESPN; Seton Hall at Marquette, 11 a.m., FS1; Ohio State at Iowa, 11:30 a.m., BTN; Georgia at Auburn, 1 p.m., ESPN2; Kansas at Baylor, 1 p.m., ESPN; Tennessee at Florida, 3 p.m., ESPN; Arizona State at Stanford, 3 p.m., Pac-12 Net; DePaul at St. John’s, 3 p.m., CBSSN; Nevada at Fresno State, 5 p.m., ESPNU; Vanderbilt at Kentucky, 5:30 p.m., SEC Network; Gonzaga at USF, 7 p.m., ESPN2; Washington at Colorado, 7 p.m., ESPNU; Arizona at Cal, 7:30 p.m., Pac-12 Net.
* Sunday: Villanova at Creighton, 9 a.m., Channel 11; Michigan State at Penn State, 1:30 p.m.; Northwestern at Michigan, 4:30 p.m., BTN.

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1fourSensing that the Lakers’ desperation with a 1-5 run since LeBron James went out with a groin injury in Christmas Day, dropping them to the No. 8 spot in the Western Conference, the only comfort seems to be that there’s hope he could return by the time his former team, Cleveland, comes into town (at Staples Center, Sunday at 6:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet).
Sooner, sure. But let’s be sure about groin pulls.
The Lakers’ Friday night loss to the 10-29 Knicks, at Staples Center, followed by a 22-point drubbing at Minnesota on Sunday that was apparently so embarrassing for the Timberwolves that their fired their coach afterward, really doesn’t look all that swell.
Also this week for the Lakers:
* At Dallas, Monday at 5:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
* Vs. Detroit, at Staples Center, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet, ESPN
* At Utah, Friday at 7 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet, ESPN

The Clippers have a meet-and-greet with Blake Griffin and Detroit at Staples Center (Saturday, 12:30 p.m., Prime Ticket). Consider the Pistons’ season. They started 4-0. Then lost five in a row (two in OT). They won five in a row over Thanksgiving. Then lost six straight. Griffin leads the team with 25.0 points and 5.2 assists a game, to go with 8.7 rebounds.
Also this week for the Clippers;
* Vs. Charlotte at Staples Center, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Denver, Thursday at 6 p.m., Prime Ticket

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1fiveWhen Pittsburgh comes to Southern California for its only NHL stop of the year, is it still kind of a big deal? We shall see when the Ducks face the Pens on Friday (at Honda Center, Friday at 7 p.m., Prime Ticket) and the Kings get them the next day (at Staples Center, Saturday at 7:30 p.m., FSW). Sidney Crosby (19 goals, 32 assists) is 12th in the league in scoring. Neither the Ducks nor Kings have anyone in the top 90 in points.
Also this week for the Kings:
* At San Jose, Monday at 7:30 p.m., FSW
* Vs. Ottawa at Staples Center, Thursday at 7:30 p.m., FSW
Also this week for the Ducks:
* Vs. Ottawa at Honda Center, Wednesday at 7 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Winnipeg, Sunday at 3 p.m., Prime Ticket

12.31.18: Five things you should plan for the week ahead based on unscientific evidence of guaranteed importance

1oneHow do the 12-4 Chargers cause chaos in any team’s drive to the 2019 Super Bowl? By simply playing. As a No. 5 seed with perhaps the second-best team in the AFC — their play of late might not show that — they can make life difficult for those who finished ahead of them in the divisional races. A story in the Washington Post assessing these playoffs gives the Houston Texans the easiest road to the Super Bowl out of the AFC if teams like the Chargers start playing as they did in mid-season and begin knocking everyone out. Their first playoff game, however, comes with a trip to Baltimore (Sunday, 10 a.m., Channel 2) and a rematch of a Week 16 loss to the AFC North Division winning Ravens, with the smell of a 22-10 loss still hanging in the holiday air. Win there, and it’s likely another rematch is set up against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC semifinals.
The Ravens won their last three in a row and six of their last seven (only a three-point loss to Kansas City in that run) to take the first division title since 2012, sporting the NFL’s top-ranked defense and watching Lamar Jackson wake up the offense. The Chargers sported a 7-1 road record this season, for what that’s worth, tied with New Orleans for the best away mark in the NFL. But when California kids have to go to the brutal chill of an East Coast destination, things can turn frosty pretty fast.
If you’re looking at other hypotheticals, like ESPN’s Football Power Index, the Rams have the third-best chance of winning the Super Bowl (16.8 percent, behind New Orleans’ 30.5  percent and Kansas City’s 24 percent) with the Chargers as the fifth-best (4.2 percent). Over at FiveThirtyEight.com, New Orleans and Kansas City are almost even at 20 percent to win it all, with the Rams fourth behind New England, and the Chargers seventh. Hmmm.

As the Rams get a bye week, here’s the wildcard round to start things:
Saturday:
* Indianapolis at Houston, 1:30 p.m., Channel 7/ESPN
* Seattle at Dallas, 5:15 p.m., Channel 11
Also Sunday:
* Philadelphia at Chicago, 1:40 p.m., Channel 4

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1twoReally, could this be the year California sends four teams to the NBA Finals? Only the New York Times could be that observant with a headline that actually ran on a story posted. Aside from the fact only two teams make the finals, and only one could be from California …
The point of the piece was that the four NBA teams playing in California – the Lakers, Clippers, Warriors and Kings – have never made the Western Conference playoffs in the same season, but less than halfway through this regular season, it seems possible. It’s also impossible to note that while the Warriors are back atop the Western Conference, the Lakers and Clippers are wedged in the middle and the Kings are barely holding on to the No. 8 spot, it is so tightly packed with 11 teams having at least 18 wins, a dozen teams could change all kinds of places in a matter of weeks.
The Lakers’ radar this week includes:
* Vs. Oklahoma City, at Staples Center, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet, ESPN
* Vs. New York, at Staples Center, Friday at 7:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
* At Minnesota, Sunday at 12:30 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
On the Clippers’ schedule this week:
* Vs. Philadelphia, at Staples Center, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., Prime Ticket
* At Phoenix, Friday at 6 p.m., Prime Ticket
* Vs. Orlando, at Staples Center, Sunday at 12:30 p.m., Prime Ticket

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1threeThere is a eight-day waiting period between the national semifinals and the Jan. 7 title game at Santa Clara, but still plenty of meaningful (or meaningless) bowls to be played out.
That includes the still-in-tact Rose Bowl Game Presented by Northwestern Mutual Which Does Not Include Northwestern By Mutual Decision of Big Ten. The Wildcats lost the conference title game, so instead we have the awkwardness of No. 6 Ohio State, in what is supposed to be Urban Meyer’s final game, against No. 9 Washington, which somehow survived a mild Pac-12 schedule (Tuesday, 2 p.m., ESPN).
Also this week:
Monday:
* Military Bowl in Annapolis, Md.: Cincinnati vs. Virginia Tech, 9 a.m., ESPN
* Sun Bowl in El Paso, Tex.: Stanford vs. Pittsburgh, 11 a.m., Channel 2
* Redbox Bowl in Santa Clara: Michigan State vs. Oregon, noon, Channel 11
* Liberty Bowl at Memphis, Tenn.: Missouri vs. Oklahoma State, 12:45 p.m., ESPN
* Holiday Bowl in San Diego: Northwestern vs. Utah, 4 p.m., FS1
* Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla.: North Carolina State vs. Texas A&M, 4:30 p.m., ESPN
Tuesday:
* Outback Bowl in Tampa, Fla.: Mississippi State vs. Iowa, 9 a.m., ESPN2
* Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla.: Kentucky vs. Penn State, 10 a.m., Channel 7
* Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Ariz.: LSU vs. Central Florida, 10 a.m., ESPN
* Sugar Bowl in New Orleans: Texas vs. Georgia, 5:45 p.m., ESPN

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1fourGoing into the final week of non-conference play, the Pac-12 had just one team in the Top 25 college basketball poll – Arizona State, No. 17 in the AP, and No. 18 in the coaches’ poll and, if you’re going by the new NCAA NET rankings, a dismal No. 31, best in the conference. And this was before the Sun Devils fell to No. 45 after they were upset at home against Princeton last weekend. Accurate or not, that’s still the highest placed school in the Pac-12.
Or is it the Pathetic 12?
After UCLA’s fourth loss in a row, this time at home to Liberty, the 7-6 Bruins dropped from No. 61 to 94 in the NET. USC is at No. 130 out of 353, trailing schools such as Gardner-Webb, Brown, Austin Peay, UC Irvine (No. 106), Radford, San Diego (of the WCC) … Let’s just end this.
As the rumors swirl about Steve Alford’s job status at UCLA — update, he’s been fired —  the problem is now that any Pac-12 team trying to improve it status between now at the selection of the 68-team tournament in early March has really no chance to do so now that non-conference play is over. In the AP and coaches’ polls, not one of the 11 non-ASU teams were even mentioned in the “others receiving votes.” Remember last season, when the Pac-12 had only three reps in the tournament, and UCLA had a play-in game.
Another unbalanced Pac-12 basketball season begins with the Bay Area teams visiting Southern California. God speed to them:
For UCLA:
* Vs. Stanford, at Pauley Pavilion, Thursday at 8 p.m,, ESPN
* Vs. Cal, at Pauley Pavilion, Saturday at 1 p.m., Pac-12 Network
For USC:
* Vs. Cal, at the Galen Center, Thursday at 7 p.m., Pac-12 Network
* Vs. Stanford, at the Galen Center, Sunday at 5 p.m., ESPNU
To start the West Coast Conference:
* Thursday: Loyola Marymount at Pepperdine, Firestone Fieldhouse, 7 p.m., Spectrum SportsNet
Also this week in the Southland:
* Loyola Marymount vs. Portland, Saturday at Gersten Pavilion, 3 p.m.
* Pepperdine vs. USF, Saturday at Firestone Fieldhouse, 5 p.m.
* Pepperdine vs. Alabama A&M, at Firestone Fieldhouse, Monday at 3 p.m. (non-conference)
Local non-conference:
* Long Beach State vs. Bethesda, Walter Pyramid, Saturday at 7 p.m.
* Cal State Northridge at San Diego State, Tuesday at noon
* Cal State Northridge vs. Yale, at the Matadome, Saturday at 7 p.m.
National games of interest:
* Tuesday: Notre Dame at Virginia Tech, 10 a.m., ESPNU; Marquette at St. John’s, 4 p.m., FS1; Cal State Fullerton at Washington, 7 p.m., Pac-12 Network
* Wednesday: Oklahoma at Kansas, 6 p.m., ESPN2; Harvard at North Carolina, 4 p.m., ESPN2
* Thursday: Penn State at Michigan, 4 p.m., ESPN; Illinois at Indiana, 4 p.m., FS1; Utah at Arizona State, 5 p.m., Pac-12 Net; Colorado at Arizona, 6 p.m., FS1
* Saturday: Clemson at Duke, TBA, ESPN; Michigan State at Ohio State, 9 a.m., Channel 11; Kentucky at Alabama, 10 a.m., ESPN; Utah at Arizona, 11 a.m., Pac-12 Net; Florida State at Virginia, noon, ESPN2; Colorado at Arizona State, 3 p.m., Pac-12 Net; Oregon State at Oregon, 5 p.m., Pac-12 Net; Santa Clara at Gonzaga, 6 p.m.; Washington State at Washington, 7:30 p.m., Pac-12 Net.
* Sunday: Indiana at Michigan, TBA, Channel 2

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1fiveIt’s one of 1,271 NHL regular season games, but the one that the Bruins and Blackhawks will play on New Year’s Day in Notre Dame Stadium (Tuesday, 10 a.m., Channel 4) should be among the most spectacular of the league’s outdoor games that go back to 2008. Maybe Garth Brooks will even come back and do a concert or two between periods.
Also this week for the Kings:
* At Colorado, Monday at 5 p.m., FSW
* At Vegas, Tuesday at 6 p.m., FSW
* Vs. Tampa Bay, at Staples Center, Thursday at 7:30 p.m., FSW
* Vs. Edmonton, at Staples Center, Saturday at 7 p.m., FSW
Also this week for the Ducks:
* Vs. Tampa Bay, at Honda Center, Monday at 5 p.m., Prime Ticket
* Vs. Vegas, at Honda Center, Friday at 7 p.m., Fox Sports West
* Vs. Edmonton, at Honda Center, Sunday at 5 p.m., Prime Ticket

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static1.squarespace.com

The U.S. Army All-American Bowl in San Antonio’s Alamodome (Saturday, 10 a.m., Channel 4) is a high school All Star exhibition on one hand, but mostly a place for more players to announce their college intentions on national TV. That will include Mater Dei receiver Bru McCoy (the L.A. Times high school player of the year), Orange Lutheran receiver Kyle Ford and St. John Bosco cornerback Chris Steele. They are among the few who didn’t sign a national letter of intent a couple weeks ago. According to the 247Sports recruiting site, only five of the 32 five-star prospects are not signed up yet – including McCoy (USC, Texas) and Ford (USC, Oregon, Colorado, Washington, Michigan). Steele was an early commit to USC but recently backed off after visiting Florida, Oregon and Oklahoma. Can this save USC’s recruiting class? We shall see, apparently.