Late push saves Shockers

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita State coach Gregg Marshall has never been shy about proclaiming the exploits of his team.

But after the No. 24 Shockers outlasted East Carolina 75-69 on Wednesday, he was not in the mood to do so.

“It wasn’t anything to shout about or call home,” Marshall said flatly. “We didn’t play our best.”

Erik Stevenson scored 10 of his 17 points after halftime for the Shockers (12-1, 1-0 American), who trailed midway through the second half thanks to East Carolina’s Jayden Gardner scoring 20 of his 29 points after halftime.

Gardner, who entered the game leading the American in scoring at 20.7 points a game, was 12 of 20 from the floor and had a game-high 10 rebounds.

“His 15-footer is almost automatic,” Marshall said. “He was able to get it a little more than we wanted.”

Jamarius Burton had 15 points for Wichita State while Tyson Etienne and Trey Wade added 11 each for the Shockers.

J.J. Miles scored 12 points for the Pirates (6-8, 0-1 American), and Tremont Robinson-White added 11.

Wichita State shot out to a 9-0 lead, and East Carolina coach Joe Dooley admitted his team “got frazzled.”

But Gardner was not going to let them get blown out.

“It’s fun to play in an atmosphere like this,” Gardner said. “Once guys got adjusted to ir, we settled down and played well.”

The Pirates came all the way back to take a 45-44 lead on Bitumba Baruti’s jumper in the lane with 12:46 remaining.

“I thought we weren’t playing aggressively enough,” Marshall said. “That’s one of the reasons they could keep scoring.”

Stevenson scored seven points over the next three minutes to push Wichita State back ahead 53-47.

“We have a lot of veteran guards,” Stevenson said, “and I think that helps us from getting too down about losing the lead, especially at home. We know we can turn that momentum around.”

East Carolina had two final-minute possessions down four or less that resulted in a turnover and a blocked shot, helping Wichita State seal the win.

“Ill-timed turnovers really hurt us,” Dooley said.

 

DENNIS ON THE BENCH

Wichita State sophomore Dexter Dennis returned to the bench after taking a leave of absence from the team for personal reasons on Dec. 21. Dennis, a member of the American Athletic Conference’s all-freshman team last season, had seen his playing time decline during the season, including a season-low 12 minutes against Oklahoma on Dec. 12.

Dennis left the team early for the holiday break and was not in attendance for Sunday’s game against Abilene Christian. He arrived at Wednesday’s game during halftime and wore street clothes.

“He flew in this morning,” Marshall said. “We are going to talk this afternoon. He told me he’s ready to go.”

 

UNGUARDED INCONSISTENCY

The Shockers were 16 of 29 from the free throw line, which has been an issue.

Wichita State has shot less than 70 percent from the free throw line in seven games and less than 60 percent in four of those.

“It could be contagious,” Marshall said. “Maybe once we start missing, people are pressing.”

 

BIG PICTURE

East Carolina: The Pirates were competitive as heavy underdogs and now have three straight home games in the most favorable part of the schedule

Wichita State: The Shockers weren’t pretty but kept their momentum heading into two significant home games

 

UP NEXT

East Carolina: The Pirates host South Florida on Tuesday.

 

Wichita State:  The Shockers host Mississippi on Saturday.

Survey: Economy growing in 9 Midwest, Plains states

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A new monthly survey of business supply managers suggests the economy is growing slowly in nine Midwest and Plains states as the U.S. trade war with China continues, according to a report released Thursday.

The Mid-America Business Conditions index rebounded to 50.6 in December, compared with 48.6 in November, the report said.

Surveys over the past several months indicate that the regional manufacturing economy is being harmed by the trade war and the global economic slowdown, said Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey.

“This will be a drag on the overall Mid-America economy for the first half of 2020. However, I expect overall regional growth to remain soft but positive for the first half of the year,” Goss said.

The survey results are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers say any score above 50 suggests growth. A score below that suggests decline. The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

The weakness in the region’s manufacturing and agriculture sectors has spilled over into the broader regional economy. Over the past 12 months, the region has added jobs at an annual pace of 0.7% — less than half the 1.5% rate of the nation’s economy.

The regional trade numbers were mixed in December. The index for new export orders rose to a weak 43.5 from November’s 39.1. The imports index was unchanged from November’s 52.0. Supply managers continue to boost purchasing from abroad in anticipation of higher tariffs in the weeks and months ahead. But 43% of supply managers who responded said tariffs had increased the prices of supplies.

Economic optimism for the next six months, as reflected by the December business confidence index, climbed to 57.6 from November’s 52.9. “Potential January passage of the U.S.-Canada-Mexico trade agreement and Phase One of the trade agreement with China boosted the regional business confidence index for the month,” Goss said.

Edna Peck

Edna Peck, age 94, died on Monday, Dec. 30, 2019, surrounded by her family.

Edna Marie Morris was born to James Oliver and Josephine (Dawson) Morris on Dec. 16, 1925, in rural Galesburg.

In 1943 Edna married Kenneth Raney; they divorced in 1966. She married Albert Smoot; he died in 1972. She married Buford Peck on Jan. 18, 1975; he died in 2012.

She was preceded in death by her parents; stepdaughter, Debra Peck; and stepson, Melvin Dean Smoot.

Survivors include children and stepchildren, Marie Toews, Robert Raney, Gary Raney, Carol Feagins, Doug Peck, Marilyn Leig, Lucinda Stanley, Rhodenia Rowe, Lavina Chambers; and other relatives.

Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, Iola. Burial will follow in the LaHarpe Cemetery. The family will greet friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday in The Venue at the funeral home.

Police report

Arrests reported

Joshua D. Eisenbart, 34, Iola, was arrested by the Kansas Highway Patrol Sunday for suspicion of violating the Registered Offender Act.

Cory D. Culler, 29, rural Iola, was arrested Sunday for suspicion of driving while intoxicated and transporting an open container of alcohol.

Martha M. Michael, 68, Iola, was arrested by Allen County sheriff’s deputies Saturday for suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

Deputies arrested Brandon L. Warren, 33, Kansas City, Mo., Friday for suspicion of transporting an open container of alcohol.

Jessika L. Lunsford, 29, Kansas City, Mo., was arrested by deputies Friday for suspicion of transporting an open container of alcohol.

Ronald L. Kercher II, 40, Iola,w as arrested by KHP Friday for suspicion of driving while suspended (second or greater offense).

Iola police officers arrested Matthew K.W. Wells, 24, Iola, for suspicion of domestic battery and criminal damage to property Friday.

Tara J. Winkler, 35, Moran, was arrested by deputies Dec. 26 for suspicion of disorderly conduct.

Iola officers arrested Russell W. VanHouden, 39, Iola, on a warrant Dec. 26.

Heman D. Barron, 30, Olathe, was arrested by KHP Dec. 25 for suspicion of driving while suspended (third or greater offense).

Iola officers arrested Brandon Allen, 20, rural Moran, on a pair of warrants Dec. 24.

Ciarra M. Neufeldt, 23, Humboldt, was booked into Allen County Jail on a warrant Dec. 24.

Deputies arrested Bradley R. Griffith, 37, Moran, Dec. 23 for suspicion of driving while intoxicated and without a required ignition interlock device.

Colony church talks about priorities

COLONY — Ben Prasko gave the Communion meditation as part of Youth Sunday services at Colony Christian Church. Prasker referred to Matthew 18:1-3 — the disciples asked Jesus who was the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven. His answer was that unless we turn from our sin and become like children, we will never enter the kingdom of Heaven. He also touched on Matthew 18:1-6 and 6:3, Deuteronomy 33:27 and 1 Timothy 2:4.

Pastor Chase Riebel gave the sermon, “Glory to the newborn king!” He discussed what the priorities should be as Christians, and that they should always glorify God. We should always: 1. Put God first, 2. Protect the family, 3. Pursue deeper discipleship.

Men’s Bible study is at 7 a.m. Tuesdays. Wednesday night Bible study at the parsonage and youth group activities at the church begin at 7 o’clock.

New Year’s Six: Oregon earns Rose Bowl win; Alabama tops Michigan

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Justin Herbert scored his third rushing touchdown of the 106th Rose Bowl on a thrilling 30-yard run with 7:41 to play Wednesday night, and No. 7 Oregon held off No. 11 Wisconsin 28-27 to win its third straight trip to the Granddaddy of Them All.

Brady Breeze returned a fumble 31 yards for an early touchdown for the Ducks (12-2). Herbert then made his go-ahead rambling run on the next snap after Breeze forced another fumble in yet another frenetic edition of this venerated bowl game.

Oregon held on to cap its Pac-12 championship season with its 12th win in 13 games. The Ducks celebrated on the famous turf amid confetti and cheers after the fourth Rose Bowl victory in school history.

Aron Cruickshank returned an early kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown for the Big Ten runner-up Badgers (10-4). They lost in their fourth consecutive trip to Pasadena over the last 10 years.

Herbert passed for just 138 yards without a touchdown in his collegiate finale. Instead, Oregon improbably relied on the legs of its 6-foot-6 quarterback to grind out the fourth Rose Bowl victory in school history.

Herbert had only 10 rushing touchdowns in the first 41 starts of his career, but he turned into a big-play machine on the ground. After he scored on runs of 4 and 5 yards in the first half, he rambled through the defense for the go-ahead score in what’s sure to be the signature moment of the four-year starter’s career.

Herbert eventually made a key 12-yard throw to Mycah Pittman for a first down with 1:51 to play, and his 28-yard throw to Juwan Johnson with 1:03 left allowed the Ducks to run out the clock.

Jonathan Taylor rushed for 94 yards and Quintez Cephus caught seven passes for 59 yards and a score for Wisconsin, but quarterback Jack Coan’s offense couldn’t capitalize on its whopping advantages in time of possession (38:03-21:57) and total yards (322-204).

 

SUGAR BOWL

NO. 5 GEORGIA 26, 

NO. 8 BAYLOR 14

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — George Pickens caught 12 passes for 175 yards and a touchdown as Georgia defeated Baylor in the Sugar Bowl.

Baylor quarterback Charlie Brewer, coming back from a concussion in the Big 12 title game on Dec. 7, was sidelined again in the fourth quarter when the back of his head appeared to hit hard on the turf as he was taken down by two defenders along the sideline.

Jake Fromm completed 20 of 30 passes for 250 yards and two touchdowns without an interception for Georgia (12-2), which lost to Texas in the Sugar Bowl last season.

Georgia was without about a dozen regulars, including three starting offensive linemen. Some players were hurt while others sat out to preserve their health for the NFL draft.

Meanwhile, top running back D’Andre Swift saw only limited action because of an ailing shoulder. Zamir White carried 18 times for 92 yards and a touchdown.

Richard LeCounte intercepted two passes, the second sealing the victory in the final minutes.

Pickens, a freshman, was selected the game’s most outstanding player.

 

CITRUS BOWL

NO. 9 ALABAMA 35, NO. 17 MICHIGAN 16

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Mac Jones threw three touchdown passes, Jerry Jeudy became the first Alabama player to top 200 receiving yards in a bowl game and the Crimson Tide beat Michigan 35-16 in the Citrus Bowl.

Jones connected with Jeudy for an 85-yard score on Alabama’s first snap, and DeVonta Smith and Miller Forristall added touchdown grabs in the second half for the Crimson Tide (11-2), which trailed 16-14 at the break.

Jeudy finished with six catches for 204 yards. His previous career high was 147 set last season against Missouri, and the Alabama bowl record had stood for more than a half-century — Ray Perkins had 178 yards against Nebraska in the 1967 Sugar Bowl.

Jones — who took over as Alabama’s starter when Tua Tagovailoa was lost for the season with an injury in November — completed 16 of 25 passes for 327 yards. Najee Harris ran for 136 yards and two touchdowns for Alabama.

Shea Patterson completed 17 of 37 passes for 233 yards and a touchdown for Michigan (9-4), which dropped its fourth consecutive bowl game. Quinn Nordin kicked three field goals for the Wolverines, including a school-record-tying 57-yarder to end the first half and give Michigan the lead.

 

OUTBACK BOWL

NO. 16 MINNESOTA 31, NO. 9 AUBURN 9

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Tyler Johnson had 12 receptions for 204 yards and two touchdowns to become Minnesota’s career receiving leader and help the Gophers beat Auburn in the Outback Bowl.

Johnson broke Eric Decker’s school record for receiving yards on his second catch of the day and became Minnesota’s career leader for scoring receptions on a one-handed, 2-yard TD catch that put the Gophers (11-2) up 24-17 at halftime. His 73-yard catch-and-run put Minnesota head for good early in the fourth quarter.

Minnesota finished with more than 10 wins for the first time since 1904. Auburn (9-4) concluded a season in which all four of its losses came against opponents ranked in the Top 25.

Tanner Morgan completed 19 of 29 passes for 278 yards and the TDs to Johnson, who finished with 3,305 receiving yards and 33 TD catches in his career. Receiver Seth Green tossed a 1-yard touchdown pass to Bryce Witham on fourth-and-inches in the second quarter.

Noah Igbinoghene returned a kickoff 96 yards for Auburn’s first touchdown.

Actress charged with killing mom in Olathe

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — An actress who had a small role in the movie “Captain America: The First Avenger” is accused of fatally stabbing her mother inside a suburban Kansas City home.

Mollie Fitzgerald, 38, was arrested Tuesday by police in Olathe, Kansas, the Kansas City Star reported. She is charged with second-degree murder and jailed on $500,000 bond. It wasn’t immediately clear if she had an attorney who could comment on her behalf.

She’s accused in the death of 68-year-old Patricia “Tee” Fitzgerald, who authorities say was found dead on Dec. 20 inside her Olathe home.

The website IMDb said Mollie Fitzgerald is a movie director and producer as well as actress. She worked on mostly low-budget films, including “The Lawful Truth” in 2014 and “The Creeps” in 2017.

In “Captain America,” she played Stark Girl and worked as an assistant to the director, Joe Johnson. The film grossed $176.6 million in the U.S.

“Being a part of this production has been one of the best experiences of my life,” Fitzgerald told a comic book publication in 2011.

Patricia Fitzgerald was in the process of moving back to the Kansas City area after living several decades in the Houston area, her brother, Gary Hunziker, told the Star.

Their family grew up on a farm in northeast Missouri. Patricia Fitzgerald studied physical therapy at the University of Missouri and moved to the Kansas City area. She then moved to Texas, where her husband had a law firm, Hunziker, 72, of Keokuk, Iowa, said.

Hunziker said he knew few details about the circumstances surrounding his sister’s death.

“We were shocked,” he said. But, “it doesn’t matter the circumstances — the loss of a sister is what it’s all about.”

Chiefs on cusp of returning to AFC title game

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs were inches away from playing in the Super Bowl a year ago and, to many in their locker room, the sting of that overtime loss to New England has served as motivation to return to the AFC title game this season.

Now, after everything fell their way Sunday, the Chiefs need just one win to get there.

Their routine victory over the Los Angeles Chargers went down just as the Patriots were losing to the Miami Dolphins in Foxborough, giving the Chiefs the No. 2 seed in the AFC. That means they get the week off while the Patriots are forced to play a wild-card game, and ensures a divisional-round game will be played at Arrowhead Stadium the next weekend.

“We’ve got a lot of confidence, man. Defense is balling and our offense is getting things rolling,” Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill said. “We’re the hottest team. We have the most swag in the AFC.”

Yes, the top-seeded Ravens haven’t lost with Lamar Jackson on the field in ages. The Patriots still have Tom Brady, and the Texans already have gotten the best of Kansas City once this season.

But the Chiefs (12-4) have also won six straight, their offense playing at a high level and their defense evolving into one of the best in the NFL. It had a streak of 10 consecutive quarters without allowing a touchdown end on Sunday, but it still held Philip Rivers and the Chargers to 21 points and made crucial plays when they mattered in the fourth quarter.

It’s a far cry from last season, when the Chiefs defense failed to stop the Patriots in the fourth quarter and overtime, and when ex-linebacker Dee Ford’s offside penalty helped set Brady and Co. up for the winning touchdown.

“We have grown tremendously from the situation last year and there is a new makeup of the team,” Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce said “It’s as easy as that. I think, moving forward, we are a lot more comfortable this year than we were last year.”

Most of that new makeup is on defense, where the Chiefs swung a trade-and-sign deal for pass rusher Frank Clark and reeled in safety Tyrann Mathieu in free agency. Clark was a disruptive force again on Sunday, sacking Rivers once and causing him nightmares a dozen other times, and Mathieu had his team-leading fourth interception.

“Obviously we have some great momentum heading into the postseason,” Mathieu said. “It’s going to be fun. I love playing football. I love the challenges. I love everything that comes with it. I know my teammates feel the same.”

 

WHAT’S WORKING

The Chiefs defensive front has been crucial to their late-season surge, blocking up running lanes and creating pressure on opposing quarterbacks without the need to blitz. Clark had three quarterback hits to go with his sack Sunday, recently acquired pass rusher Terrell Suggs had a sack and two hits, and defensive tackle Chris Jones had a sack and two more hits.

The Chargers’ backfield duo of Melvin Gordon and Austin Ekeler was held to 92 yards rushing.

 

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The secondary could use the bye week to get healthy. The Chiefs were already down cornerback Morris Claiborne, who has been dealing with a shoulder injury, and safety Juan Thornhill left Sunday with torn ligaments in his knee. Defensive back Bashaud Breeland was in and out of the lineup while dealing with an illness, though he should be OK going forward.

 

STOCK UP

Suggs, who had just a couple days of practice before playing against Chicago last week, was more involved in the defense in his second game in Kansas City. He was in the backfield on numerous occasions, though he also misplayed a screen pass.

 

STOCK DOWN

Wide receiver Sammy Watkins had just one catch for 8 yards against Los Angeles, though part of that had to do with the fact that Kansas City rarely had the ball. The Chiefs only had one possession in the first quarter, ran three plays in the third because of Mecole Hardman’s 104-yard kick return touchdown and Damien Williams’ 84-yard touchdown run, and ran 48 offensive plays to 74 for the Chargers.

 

INJURIES

Thornhill was the biggest injury, one that could sideline the standout rookie well into next season. But the Chiefs should get offensive lineman Andrew Wylie back from his ankle injury for the divisional round

 

KEY NUMBER

3 — The number of losses the Chiefs have against the AFC West since 2015 after wrapping up a 6-0 season. Their 27-3 mark is the best winning percentage by any team against its own division in a five-season span since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970.

 

NEXT STEPS

Rest and recuperate. The Chiefs won’t know who they face in the divisional round of the playoffs until next weekend, though it will be the highest remaining seed from among the Texans, Bills and Patriots.

‘Greek Freak’ returns; Wolves top Nets in OT

CHICAGO (AP) — Giannis Antetokounmpo had 23 points and 10 rebounds after missing two games with a sore back, and the Milwaukee Bucks pulled away in the second half for a 123-102 victory over the Chicago Bulls on Monday night.

Antetokounmpo, the NBA’s second-leading scorer with an average of 30.5 points per game entering this one, played only 27 minutes and sat out the final 5 1/2 because of the lopsided score. He was 8 for 14 from the field with six assists.

Khris Middleton scored 25 points for the Bucks and Eric Bledsoe had 15 points in 16 minutes after missing the previous eight games with a fractured right leg. Milwaukee improved to a league-best 30-5.

Zach LaVine scored 19 points for the Bulls but shot just 7 for 23 from the field.

 

WIZARDS 123, 

HEAT 105

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jordan McRae scored a season-high 29 points, Garrison Mathews had a career-high 28 and Ian Mahinmi added a career-best 25 as the depleted Washington Wizards beat Miami.

With the Wizards (10-22) minus All-Star shooting guard Bradley Beal and five other key members of their rotation, they got huge contributions from an unexpected trio. McRae, a third-year player, Mathews, in his 11th NBA game, and Mahinmi, a 13-year veteran, enjoyed nights to remember against Miami (24-9), which had its five-game winning streak snapped. The Heat entered with the second-best record in the East and lost for just the third time in 20 games against conference opponents.

Jimmy Butler led Miami with 27 points. Bam Adebayo had 14 points and 14 rebounds.

 

SUNS 122, 

TRAIL BLAZERS 116

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Devin Booker scored 33 points, Kelly Oubre Jr. had 29 and Phoenix rallied past Portland.

After trailing by 19, the Suns roared back to win their second consecutive game and hand the Trail Blazers their fourth straight defeat.

A 3-pointer by Oubre gave Phoenix a 120-114 lead with 43.8 seconds left. After the shot, Oubre blew kisses to the Blazers crowd.

Ricky Rubio added 18 points and 13 assists for the Suns.

Damian Lillard had 33 points and CJ McCollum scored 25 for Portland. Hassan Whiteside had 16 points and 22 rebounds.

 

JAZZ 104, PISTONS 81

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Donovan Mitchell scored 23 points and Jordan Clarkson added 20 to lead Utah over Detroit.

Rudy Gobert added 13 points and 19 rebounds for the surging Jazz, and Bojan Bogdanovic scored 17. Utah won for the eighth time in nine games.

Derrick Rose had 20 points to lead the Pistons, and Andre Drummond added 15 points and 13 rebounds. Detroit has dropped seven straight against Utah.

 

TIMBERWOLVES 122, NETS 115, OT

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Shabazz Napier scored a season-high 24 points, Jarrett Culver added 21 and the short-handed Minnesota Timberwolves rallied past Brooklyn in overtime.

The Timberwolves had lost 12 of 13 and were again without injured Karl-Anthony Towns and ill Andrew Wiggins. Gorgui Dieng started in Towns’ place and had 11 points and 20 rebounds. It was Minnesota’s first home win since Nov. 13.

Keita Bates-Diop added 15 points off the bench.

Spencer Dinwiddie scored 36 to lead the Nets, who have lost three straight.

 

HAWKS 101, 

MAGIC 93

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Brandon Goodwin scored 21 points, Kevin Huerter added 19 and Atlanta topped Orlando to end a 10-game skid.

Playing without injured guard Trae Young (ankle) for the second straight game, the Hawks trailed by 18 during the first half but rallied in the third quarter. Alex Len scored eight of his 18 points to fuel a 15-4 run, while Atlanta’s defense yielded only six field goals in the period. Len’s drive and dunk just before the horn gave the Hawks a 74-72 lead, and they pulled away near the midpoint of the fourth with an 11-0 run.

Atlanta had been on its second 10-game losing streak of the season. This one ended with the Hawks’ second win in two tries against Orlando.

Nikola Vucevic led the Magic with 27 points.

Robinson leads Tar Heels as Williams gets win No. 879

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — It wasn’t the cleanest game of Roy Williams’ career, but it was a milestone victory all the same.

Brandon Robinson scored a career-high 20 points and Williams tied his mentor on the all-time wins list as North Carolina beat Yale 70-67 on Monday night.

Justin Pierce added 14 points for the Tar Heels (8-5), who nearly squandered a 12-point lead with six minutes remaining.

Williams picked up his 879th career victory as a head coach, tying Dean Smith for the fourth most in Division I men’s basketball history. Williams worked as an assistant for Smith at North Carolina for 10 seasons from 1978-88.

“It’s a number,” Williams said. “It means I stayed around a long time, probably longer than some people wanted me to stay at places.”

Garrison Brooks had 11 points and 11 rebounds for the Tar Heels, and Jeremiah Francis had 10 points.

Azar Swain’s 30-foot 3-point attempt misfired at the buzzer for Yale (10-4).

“It’s not too often that’s Carolina is going to lose a nonconference game in this building,” Yale coach James Jones said. “It just doesn’t happen very often. And we were as close as you can possibly be.”

Swain battled through a sore ankle to score 21 points for Yale, whose seven-game winning streak ended. Jordan Bruner had 17 points and 15 rebounds, and Paul Atkinson added 10 points.

North Carolina answered a 7-0 run by Yale to open the second half with a 20-4 spurt, taking a 52-39 lead with 9:27 remaining.