Football
PREP SHOWDOWNS: Ben Lomond visits Ogden Monday at 4 p.m. in a game originally slated for last Friday, but postponed because of snow. Should the Scots prevail, they will meet Sky View Tuesday for the right to play in the 4A state playoffs.
Other Tiebreaker Tuesday games feature Alta facing Mountain View (3 p.m., at Jordan) and Granger meeting West Jordan (3:30 p.m., at Kearns).
STOKES' SEASON OVER: The season officially ended for the 49ers' J.J. Stokes on Saturday when Coach George Seifert announced the wide receiver had been put on injured reserve.
The move, made one day after Stokes underwent surgery on his injured right wrist, makes him ineligible to return until the 1997 season.
Triathlon
BELGIAN WINS IRONMAN: In Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, Luc Van Lierde won the Ironman Triathlon World Championship in record time Saturday on his first attempt at the 140.6-mile distance and despite a three-minute penalty at the start of the run.
His time was an unofficial 8 hours, 4 minutes and 11 seconds, breaking the record of 8:07:45 set by Mark Allen in 1993.
Van Lierde, 27, of Brugge, Belgium, passed Thomas Hellriegel with about five miles to go in the 26.2-mile run.
Figure skating
PRO CHAMPIONSHIPS: Kurt Browning, a four-time world champion on the Olympic-eligible level who never fared well in the Olympics, won the U.S. Professional Figure Skating Championships on Saturday night. The Canadian took the technical program with a tribute to Gene Kelly from "That's Entertainment," getting two perfect 10.0s. Then he added six more 10s in the free skate.
Last December, Browning clinched the world pro title when he outskated a strong field, using the Commodores' "Brick House" to soar to the top. He stuck with that program, and it worked again as he edged Paul Wylie - a late replacement for the injured Brian Boitano - and Viktor Petrenko.
Kristi Yamaguchi, the 1992 Olympic champion, won the women's title over Ekaterina Gordeeva and Katarina Witt.
Yamaguchi received four 10s for her free skate, to "Teach Me How To Shimmy" from "Smokey Joe's Cafe." She scored 197.5, barely ahead of Gordeeva (197.0), who was making her pro debut in head-to-head competition.
Basketball
SONICS SIGN SPENCER: Elmore Spencer, a free-agent center who spent last season with Denver and Portland, signed with the Seattle SuperSonics on Saturday.
The club also waived guard Drew Barry and forward Anthony Miller.
Auto racing
GM GOODWRENCH: Jack Sprague held off a determined challenge from Johnny Benson Jr. to win the GM Goodwrench-Delco Battery 300 on Saturday at Phoenix International Raceway.
The win was the fourth of the season for Sprague, and gave him a sweep of the two NASCAR Crafts Truck Series races on the one-mile Phoenix oval. It also kept him at least mathematically in the championship race with leader Ron Hornaday Jr. and runner-up Mike Skinner.
NHRA TOP FUEL: At Pomona, Calif., Scott Kalitta edged Cory McClenathan in the quickest race in NHRA history to win the Budweiser Classic, a special event for Top Fuel dragsters Saturday during the Winston Select Finals.
Kalitta, from Chelsea, Mich., covered the quarter-mile in 4.648 seconds at 316.56 mph. McClenathan, from Anaheim, Calif., finished at 4.677, 309.38.
Kalitta won $100,000 for his first Classic victory. He can earn a $50,000 bonus for winning the event title Sunday.
Running
TULSA RACE: Kenyans Joseph Kamau and Delillah Asiago used different tactics, but each emerged as winners in Tulsa's 15-kilometer road race Saturday. Kamau set a course record of 42 minutes, 50 seconds by taking control over the second half of the race. Asiago finished in 51:08.