Tarkanian dies at 84…Kings land Karl…Woods under wraps…Jets add depth

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Naismith Hall of Fame coach Jerry Tarkanian has died at 84, two days after he was hospitalized with an infection and breathing difficulties. The towel-chewing Tarkanian won the 1990 NCAA championship with UNLV, took the Runnin’ Rebels to four Final Fours and was 509-105 in 19 seasons at the school. He also had great success at Fresno State but was constantly at odds with the NCAA during his 31 years as a Division I head coach.

UNDATED (AP) — A person familiar with the negotiations says the Sacramento Kings and George Karl have agreed to the framework of a deal for him to take over as coach. The plan is for Karl to coach the Kings in their first game following the All-Star break Feb. 20 at home against Boston. Karl has won over 1,100 games and owns a .599 winning percentage in stops at Cleveland, Golden State, Seattle, Milwaukee and Denver.

PEBBLE BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Tiger Woods says his golf is not acceptable for the PGA Tour and he will not return until it is. He says on his website that he wants to play the Honda Classic that starts Feb. 26, but he won’t if he’s not tournament-ready. He was playing poorly at Torrey Pines last week when he withdrew after 11 holes because of tightness in his back, although he says the injury is not related to the back surgery he had last spring.

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The Winnipeg Jets have bolstered their roster for a playoff run by acquiring defenseman Tyler Myers and forward Drew Stafford from the Buffalo Sabres. The Jets also get forward Joel Armia, the rights to 2014 second round pick Brendan Lemieux and Buffalo’s latest first-round pick in this year’s draft for left wing Evander Kane, defenseman Zach Bogosian and college goaltender Jason Kasdorf. The Jets sit fourth in the Central Division and are seven points ahead of Minnesota for the final Western Conference playoff berth.

CHICAGO (AP) — Little League International has stripped Chicago’s Jackie Robinson West of its national title after finding the team falsified its boundary map. The league made the announcement and said the Chicago team violated regulations by placing players on the team who didn’t qualify because they lived outside the team’s boundaries.