Dayton Daily News

Football:

- (At) Flyers 4, Hurricanes 3 (OT):

Former San Francicos 49ers receiver Dwight Clark, who gave the Bay Area one of its most iconic sports moments with “The Catch” in 1982, announced his battle with ALS in a blog post. Clark, 60, was diagnosed with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis in late 2015, he wrote, after visits to six neurologis­ts and three ALS specialist­s.

Denver was seeded No. 1 in the NCAA’s Division I men’s tournament that begins Saturday. The other No. 1 seeds in the 16-team field: Minnesota-Duluth, Harvard and Minnesota. The Frozen Four semifinals are April 6 in Chicago and the championsh­ip game there is April 8.

Penn State won its sixth title in seven years Saturday night in St. Louis. The Nittany Lions won five individual championsh­ips. They finished with 146.5 points.

Ohio State (110) was second, Oklahoma State third (103) and Iowa fourth (97).

This marked the 11th straight national title for the Big Ten Conference.

Eric Frenzel wrapped up an unpreceden­ted fifth straight Nordic combined World Cup title Sunday in Schonach, Germany, with his 10th win of the season.

John Force, a 16-time champion, won the Gatornatio­nals in Gainesvill­e, Fla., on Sunday for the first time since 2001.

College hockey: College wrestling: Skiing: NHRA:

Ryan AVONDALE, ARIZ. — Newman gambled and skipped a tire-changing pit stop to move from seventh place to the lead and held on for the final two laps for a surprise victory in Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup series race.

The 39-year-old Newman, who broke a 127-race winless streak, held off Kyle Larson, the second-place finisher for the third straight race.

Kyle Busch, the leader for nearly all of the final stage of the race, was third on a day when the temperatur­e soared to 97 degrees at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway.

Like nearly all the rest of the field, Larson and Busch went to the pits on the late caution caused when Joey Logano’s car blew a right tire and slammed into the wall six laps from the finish.

Newman, in his first win since the 2013 Brickyard 400, gave Chevrolet its first victory of the season and ended a 112-race losing streak for Richard Childress Racing.

Once again, Logano’s misfortune foiled Busch. Last week Logano’s car knocked Busch’s into the wall on the final stretch in Las Vegas. That led Busch to storm down pit row and throw a punch at Logano, creating a scuffle with the crews and a meeting for the drivers with NASCAR officials on Friday.

Busch took the lead with a quick pit stop during a caution flag and led for 113 laps before heading to the pits after Logano’s crash.

The series of runner-up finishes gave Larson the Cup points lead, the first time Chip Ganassi Racing has led the points race this late in the season since 2002.

Larson, with two new tires on his Chevrolet, came out of the late pit stop ahead of Childress’ Toyota and had the best chance to catch Newman.

But he couldn’t find a way to get around the veteran. Logano won the first stage and Chase Elliott the second in NASCAR’s new three-stage racing system.

Elliott dominated the second stage but lost the lead after Matt Kenseth, like Logano, blew a right front tire and slammed into the wall on the 193rd lap of the 314-lap race. In the ensuing pit stop, Busch got out quicker than Elliott to take the lead.

Blown tires were a common site on the hot pavement.

Logano’s woes:

Logano started on the pole and won on the same track in the nextto-last race of last season. He was in third place coming out of the pits during a caution flag between the second and third series but was penalized for speeding on pit row.

The held him back a lap and he had climbed his way through about half of the field before the tire blew.

A week ago, Busch was penalized for pit row speeding.

Up next:

The Cup’s “NASCAR Goes West” tour heads to Fontana, Calif., this Sunday for the finale of its three-race spring trip to the West.

Lukas Sedlak and Brandon Dubinsky scored on penalty shots as the Blue Jackets won their fourth straight game and clinched the third playoff berth in franchise history. This marked only the third time in NHL history that a team scored twice in a game on penalty shots.

Sidney Crosby earned his 10th career hat trick in a span of 11 minutes over the second and third periods. Marc-Andre Fleury made 21 saves to earn his 44th career shutout.

Josh Morrissey’s third-period goal broke a 4-4 tie and undid the Wild’s comeback from a 4-0 deficit. The Wild’s Chris Stewart scored twice in the second period. Minnesota has lost five straight.

Jonathan Toews scored twice and Richard Panik and Artemi Panarin each had a goal in a span of 3:02 in the third period to erase Colorado’s twogoal lead and set up Chicago’s fifth straight win.

Brayden Schenn scored 38 seconds into overtime. Carey Price made 30 saves for his 33rd win of the season as Montreal swept the weekend home-and-home series. Tomas Plekanec, Jordie Benn, Paul Byron and Nathan Beaulieu scored for the Canadiens. Late

 ?? RALPH FRESO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ryan Newman leans on the trophy Sunday after winning at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway, his first victory since the 2013 Brickyard 400.
RALPH FRESO / ASSOCIATED PRESS Ryan Newman leans on the trophy Sunday after winning at Phoenix Internatio­nal Raceway, his first victory since the 2013 Brickyard 400.

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