Red Bluff Daily News

November 11, 2014

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and then absorb the con- tact while still holding on to the ball — was an im- pressive bit of skill that made it 35-0 with 6 min- utes left in the first half. Red Bluff quarterback Kade Lewis was 6 of 15 for just 47 yards, and he was sacked three times as the Spartans' offensive line was under siege all night. In all, Red Bluff man- aged just 28 yards of total offense, with only David Stroud's goal-line touch- down run preventing the shutout. Lane Pritchard led the Spartans with four catches for 24 yards. ContactSportsWriter Travis Souders at tsoud- ers@gmail.com PV FROMPAGE1 PV62,RedBluff7 RB 0 0 0 7 — 7 PV 21 21 13 7 — 62 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Rushing— Red Bluff, Dagen 4-(minus 3), Berry 1-0, Lewis 5-(minus 10), Pritchard 2-(minus 5), Stroud 3-2, Lyons 3-(minus 4). PV, Leitner 14-83, Jensen 3-23, Berger 2-4, Darms 1-2, Cooley 5-56, Mansfield 1-15, Savercool 3-38, Hughes 1-4, Bungay 3-30, Torres 2-10 . Passing— Red Bluff, Lewis 6-15-0-47. PV, Darms 5-6-0-100, Hughes 3-5-0-62. Receiving— Red Bluff, Pritchard 4-24, Lyons 1-0, Skaggs 1-23. PV, Morris 2-23, Steindorf 1-13, Anderson 2-53, Williams 1-54, Urrutia 1-9, Rodriguez 1-10. good. We're going to go all the way." The Timberjacks led Mercy 20-13 early in the second quarter before the Warriors took a 21-20 lead on Gentry's kickoff return and a successful two-point conversion with about 9:30 left to play in the first half. The Warriors, which fell to Hayfork 42-26 in Sep- tember, led the Timber- jacks 31-20 at the half. "We finally played to our potential," Warriors coach Marvin Benefield said. "We needed to have everyone el- igible and healthy and in shape." For its part, Hayfork stuck around until the final minutes of the game, scor- ing on a 1-yard rushing TD by Joe Nagle to trail Mercy 63-54 with about 2:15 left to play. On Mercy's next posses- sion, House ran in the dag- ger, scoring on a 61-yard rushing TD to put the War- riors up 70-54. Richie Borges was 4 of 6 on point after touchdown attempts. "Today we just played smash mouth," Bene- field said. "The way I was brought up — the Red Bluff youth football program — to take it and pound it down their throat all night long, and that's what we did." Benefield, who took over coaching duties this year, said bringing a playoff win back to Mercy High School "means everything." "It's the goals that I had," he said. "We got the No. 2 seed and some of the people don't think we de- served it, but if they look at strength of schedule we played all the powerhouse teams." He added, "We've been in dog fights with the tough teams, and today is proof of that." Mercy FROM PAGE 1 By Josh Dubow The Associated Press ALAMEDA As the Oak- land Raiders went through the first half of the season without a win, one posi- tive they could latch onto was the promising play from rookie quarterback Derek Carr. The second half of the season started off with an- other loss as Carr played his worst game of the sea- son in a 41-17 loss to the Denver Broncos. Carr threw two inter- ceptions, threw another pass to an ineligible offen- sive lineman that led to a fumble and was unable to get the ball downfield at all until a late garbage- time drive as the Raid- ers (0-9) lost their 15th straight game. "It's not just Derek," in- terim coach Tony Sparano said Monday. "I know we want to make this just about Derek, but it's not really about Derek. I thought at times in the game yesterday, the kid re- ally did some good things. Then there are times dur- ing the ballgame yester- day you can tell that ev- erybody at one point was trying to do a little too much." While Carr is getting al- most no help from a run- ning game on pace to be the least productive in the NFL since the 1946 De- troit Lions and a receiving group that struggles to get open, it was his mistakes that played a big role in the game spiraling out of control after the Raiders took a 10-6 lead. Oakland looked to add onto the lead late in the first half with the ball near midfield when Carr threw an ill-advised pass over the middle that sailed on him after he was hit and went right to Bradley Roby for an interception. Three plays later, the Broncos took the lead on a 51-yard touchdown pass to C.J. Anderson. The Raiders followed that with one of their nine three-and-outs in the game, leading to one more Denver touchdown before the half. The problems only got worse from there as Carr dumped off a pass to guard Khalif Barnes, thinking it was running back Darren McFadden. Barnes caught the ball even though he was inel- igible and it would have been a penalty. The prob- lem only got worse when Barnes fumbled, setting up another Denver touch- down. Carr threw another in- terception later in the third quarter, setting up Manning's fifth touch- down pass of the game. Carr finished 30 for 47 for 192 yards with two touchdowns and two in- terceptions. His stat line was saved by a final drive when he completed all seven passes for 96 yards and a touchdown, sav- ing him from having the most attempts ever for a quarterback who failed to reach 100 yards passing. "As a rookie nine games into it, I'm learning. I'm learning," he said after the game. "It doesn't mat- ter what happens, whether I go out and I throw four touchdowns or I throw two picks, whatever, I'm learning and I'm grow- ing." NFL Rookie Derek Carr hits bump in latest Raiders loss BENMARGOT—THEASSOCIATEDPRESS Oakland Raiders quarterback Derek Carr prepares to pass against the Denver Broncos during an NFL football game in Oakland, Sunday. vate him or place in him on season-ending injured re- serve. Bowman is return- ing from a devastating left knee injury from the NFC championship game at Se- attle. "Tomorrow we'll see if that window gets opened to start practicing," Har- baugh said. San Francisco held on for a 27-24 victory against the Saints on Sunday, and the alternative would have left the Niners on a three-game losing streak and in dire po- sition considering they're al- ready sitting third in the tal- ented NFC West. They still have two games with the Seahawks remaining and first-place Arizona at home in the regular-season finale. "As Anquan Boldin said, 'These now are one-game seasons for us,' and that's the way we'll approach them," Harbaugh said. "They played with as much heart, as much hustle, as much fight as I've ever seen our teams play since we've been here." Now, he hopes the Nin- ers can build on that as they take on the Giants (3-6), who lost 38-17 on the road to defending Super Bowl champion Seattle. Harbaugh isn't ready to say what kind of role Smith will have right away, though defensive coordinator Vic Fangio has certainly ex- pected to have one of his star defenders back in the mix as soon as possible. They can use his menac- ing presence. "We can't afford to lose any games if we want to ac- complish our goals that we set at the beginning of the year," linebacker Ahmad Brooks said. "It's impera- tive for us to win." The 25-year-old Smith, one of the NFL's top pass rushers, missed five games last season to undergo treat- ment at an inpatient facility following his DUI arrest on Sept. 20, 2013. Last spring, the 49ers picked up his 2015 contract option despite his legal trou- bles. In November, he pleaded not guilty to three felony counts of illegal posses- sion of an assault weapon, stemming from a June 2012 party at his home. Smith's new start begins with practice this week. "Very much look forward to that," Harbaugh said. "There's consequences for our actions, good and bad. Good consequences for good actions. There's ac- countability. He has served that. He has done that and look forward to moving for- ward in a fresh, clean slate. That's what I anticipate and look forward to." 49ers FROM PAGE 1 BASEBALL All-Star Series Game 1MLB All-Stars vs. Japan All-Stars MLB 1a.m. NBA BASKETBALL San Antonio Spurs at Golden State Warriors: 7:30p.m., CSNBA. FOOTBALL NCAA Football: 5p.m., ESPN2, ESPNU. NHL HOCKEY San Jose at Florida: 4:30p.m., CSN. Buffalo at St. Louis: 5p.m., NBCSN. TENNIS ATP World Tour Finals Singles Round Robin: 6a.m., TENNIS. ATP World Tour Finals Doubles Round Robin: 10a.m., TENNIS. ATP World Tour Finals Singles Round Robin: noon, TENNIS. ATP World Tour Finals Doubles Round Robin: 4a.m., TENNIS. On the air Scoreboard Football AMERICANCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 7 2 0 .778 286 202 Kansas City 6 3 0 .667 217 151 San Diego 5 4 0 .556 205 186 Oakland 0 9 0 .000 146 252 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 7 2 0 .778 281 198 Buffalo 5 4 0 .556 191 182 Miami 5 4 0 .556 227 171 N.Y. Jets 2 8 0 .200 174 265 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 6 3 0 .667 290 211 Houston 4 5 0 .444 206 197 Tennessee 2 7 0 .222 144 223 Jacksonville 1 9 0 .100 158 282 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cleveland 6 3 0 .667 209 172 Cincinnati 5 3 1 .611 197 211 Pittsburgh 6 4 0 .600 261 239 Baltimore 6 4 0 .600 261 181 NATIONALCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 8 1 0 .889 223 170 Seattle 6 3 0 .667 240 191 San Francisco5 4 0 .556 195 202 St. Louis 3 6 0 .333 163 251 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 7 2 0 .778 279 198 Dallas 7 3 0 .700 261 212 N.Y. Giants 3 6 0 .333 195 247 Washington 3 6 0 .333 197 229 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 4 5 0 .444 251 225 Carolina 3 6 1 .350 198 281 Atlanta 3 6 0 .333 219 238 Tampa Bay 1 8 0 .111 167 272 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 7 2 0 .778 182 142 Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 277 205 Minnesota 4 5 0 .444 168 199 Chicago 3 6 0 .333 194 277 Thursday'sgame Cleveland 24, Cincinnati 3 Sunday'sgames San Francisco 27, New Orleans 24, OT Kansas City 17, Buffalo 13 Detroit 20, Miami 16 Baltimore 21, Tennessee 7 N.Y. Jets 20, Pittsburgh 13 Atlanta 27, Tampa Bay 17 Dallas 31, Jacksonville 17 Denver 41, Oakland 17 Seattle 38, N.Y. Giants 17 Arizona 31, St. Louis 14 Green Bay 55, Chicago 14 Open: Houston, Indianapolis, Minnesota, New England, San Diego, Washington Monday'sgame Philadelphia 45, Carolina 21 Thursday,Nov.13 Buffalo at Miami, 5:25 p.m. Philadelphia45,Panthers21 Carolina 7 0 0 14 — 21 Philadelphia 17 14 7 7 — 45 Firstquarter Phi— FG Parkey 39, 13:25. Phi— Sproles 8 run (Parkey kick), 11:25. Car— Stewart 1 run (Gano kick), 6:00. Phi— Sproles 65 punt return (Parkey kick), 3:29. Secondquarter Phi— J.Matthews 13 pass from Sanchez (Parkey kick), 11:33. Phi— Fletcher 34 interception return (Parkey kick), 2:13. Thirdquarter Phi— McCoy 1 run (Parkey kick), 7:40. Fourthquarter Phi— J.Matthews 18 pass from Sanchez (Parkey kick), 11:43. Car— Benjamin 21 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 9:05. Car— Benjamin 40 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 5:30. A— 69,596. Car Phi First downs 21 17 Total net yards 317 365 Rushes yds 32-102 23-37 Passing 215 328 Punt returns 3-19 3-85 Kickoff returns 3-82 0-0 Int ret 0-0 3-36 Comp-att-int 25-40-3 20-38-0 Sacked yds lost 9-91 1-4 Punts 7-47.6 7-43.3 Fumbles lost 3-2 2-0 Penalties yds 4-30 5-50 Time of poss. 38:05 21:55 INDIVIDUALSTATS Rushing— Carolina, Stewart 11-36, D.Williams 13-31, Whittaker 6-29, New- ton 2-6. Philadelphia, McCoy 12-19, Polk 5-11, Sproles 1-8, Barkley 3-0, Sanchez 2-(minus 1). Passing— Carolina, Newton 25-40-3-306. Philadelphia, Barkley 0-1-0-0, Sanchez 20-37-0-332. Receiving— Carolina, Olsen 6-119, Stew- art 4-23, Benjamin 3-70, D.Williams 3-17, Bersin 2-24, Cotchery 2-15, Whittaker 2-7, Webb 1-16, Avant 1-8, Dickson 1-7. Philadelphia, J.Matthews 7-138, Celek 5-116, Maclin 3-38, Ertz 1-17, Sproles 1-13, Cooper 1-6, Huff 1-6, McCoy 1-(minus 2). Missedfieldgoals— None. THEAPCOLLEGETOP25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first- place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 8, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Mississippi St. (48) 9-0 1,488 1 2. Florida St. (12) 9-0 1,446 2 3. Oregon 9-1 1,334 5 4. Alabama 8-1 1,326 4 5. TCU 8-1 1,273 6 6. Baylor 8-1 1,193 10 7. Arizona St. 8-1 1,142 11 8. Ohio St. 8-1 1,086 13 9. Auburn 7-2 981 3 10. Mississippi 8-2 948 12 11. Nebraska 8-1 830 15 12. Michigan St. 7-2 782 7 13. Kansas St. 7-2 742 9 14. UCLA 8-2 691 18 15. Notre Dame 7-2 630 8 16. Georgia 7-2 622 17 17. Arizona 7-2 471 21 18. Clemson 7-2 457 19 19. Duke 8-1 431 22 20. LSU 7-3 429 14 21. Marshall 9-0 297 23 22. Wisconsin 7-2 225 25 23. Colorado St. 9-1 128 NR 24. Georgia Tech 8-2 127 NR 25. Utah 6-3 87 20 Othersreceivingvotes: Oklahoma 85, Texas A&M 83, Missouri 68, Southern Cal 47, Minnesota 26, Louisville 12, West Vir- ginia 6, Stanford 4, Boise St. 1, Georgia Southern 1, Miami 1. Basketball WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 5 1 .833 — Sacramento 5 2 .714 ½ Clippers 4 2 .667 1 Phoenix 4 3 .571 1½ Lakers 1 5 .167 4 SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 6 1 .857 — Houston 6 1 .857 — Dallas 4 3 .571 2 New Orleans 3 3 .500 2½ San Antonio 2 3 .400 3 NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 4 3 .571 — Utah 3 5 .375 1½ Minnesota 2 4 .333 1½ Oklahoma City 2 5 .286 2 Denver 1 5 .167 2½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 6 1 .857 — Brooklyn 4 2 .667 1½ Bo st on 3 3 . 50 0 2 ½ New York 2 6 .250 4½ Philadelphia 0 7 .000 6 SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Miami 5 2 .714 — Washington 5 2 .714 — Atlanta 3 3 .500 1½ Charlotte 3 4 .429 2 Orlando 2 5 .286 3 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Chicago 6 2 .750 — Cleveland 3 3 .500 2 Milwaukee 3 4 .429 2½ Detroit 2 5 .286 3½ Indiana 2 6 .250 4 Sunday'sgames Brooklyn 104, Orlando 96 Utah 97, Detroit 96 Oklahoma City 101, Sacramento 93 Toronto 120, Philadelphia 88 Miami 105, Dallas 96 Phoenix 107, Golden State 95 Portland 116, Denver 100 Lakers 107, Charlotte 92 Monday'sgames Indiana 97, Utah 86 Cleveland 118, New Orleans 111 Atlanta 91, New York 85 Chicago 102, Detroit 91 San Antonio at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday'sgames Orlando at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Lakers at Memphis, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Charlotte at Portland, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 16 10 3 3 23 41 32 Vancouver 16 11 5 0 22 49 44 Calgary 17 9 6 2 20 50 45 Los Angeles 15 8 4 3 19 37 30 San Jose 16 8 6 2 18 50 46 Arizona 14 6 7 1 13 34 47 Edmonton 15 6 8 1 13 38 51 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 14 9 3 2 20 35 28 St. Louis 14 9 4 1 19 35 28 Winnipeg 15 8 5 2 18 30 32 Chicago 15 8 6 1 17 41 28 Minnesota 13 7 6 0 14 37 29 Colorado 16 4 7 5 13 40 50 Dallas 14 4 6 4 12 40 50 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 15 11 3 1 23 58 41 Montreal 15 10 4 1 21 37 42 Boston 16 10 6 0 20 47 37 Detroit 15 7 3 5 19 40 37 Toronto 15 8 5 2 18 47 42 Ottawa 14 7 4 3 17 38 34 Florida 12 4 4 4 12 20 30 Buffalo 16 3 11 2 8 20 54 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 13 10 2 1 21 55 27 N.Y. Islanders 14 9 5 0 18 42 42 Philadelphia 14 7 5 2 16 45 43 Washington 14 6 5 3 15 45 42 N.Y. Rangers 14 6 6 2 14 39 46 New Jersey 15 6 7 2 14 40 49 Carolina 14 5 6 3 13 35 44 Columbus 14 4 9 1 9 36 51 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday'sgames Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 3, SO Vancouver 2, Anaheim 1, SO Edmonton 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Toronto 5, Ottawa 3 Chicago 5, San Jose 2 Monday'sgames Boston 4, New Jersey 2 Carolina 4, Calgary 1 Tuesday'sgames Minnesota at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Colorado at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Columbus at Washington, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. San Jose at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Buffalo at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Edmonton at Nashville, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at Arizona, 6 p.m. Ottawa at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Wednesday'sgames Boston at Toronto, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at Anaheim, 7:30 p.m. Soccer MLSPLAYOFFS Knockoutround EASTERNCONFERENCE Thursday,Oct.30: New York 2, Sporting Kansas City 1 WESTERNCONFERENCE Wednesday,Oct29: FC Dallas 2, Van- couver 1 Conferencesemifinals EASTERNCONFERENCE Leg1— Saturday, Nov. 1: New England 4, Columbus 2 Leg2— Sunday, Nov. 9: New England 3, Columbus 1 Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 2: New York 2, D.C. United 0 Leg2— Saturday, Nov. 8: D.C. United 2, New York 1 WESTERNCONFERENCE Leg1— Saturday, Nov. 1: LA Galaxy 0, Real Salt Lake 0 Leg2— Sunday, Nov. 9: LA Galaxy 5, Real Salt Lake 0 Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 2: Seattle 1, FC Dallas 1 Leg2— Monday, Nov. 10: FC Dallas at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. ConferenceChampionship EASTERNCONFERENCE NewEnglandvs.NewYork Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 23: New England at New York, 10:30 a.m. Leg2— Saturday, Nov. 29: New York at New England, noon WESTERNCONFERENCE Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 23: Seattle at LA Galaxy OR LA Galaxy at FC Dallas, 2 p.m. Leg2— Sunday, Nov. 30: LA Galaxy at Seattle OR FC Dallas at LA Galaxy, 5 or 6 p.m. MLSCup Sunday,Dec.7: Conference champions, noon Tennis BARCLAYSATPWORLDTOUR FINALSRESULTS Monday At O2 Arena London Purse: $6.5 million (Tour Final) Surface: Hard-Indoor RoundRobin Singles GroupA Stan Wawrinka (3), Switzerland, def. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-1. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Marin Cilic (8), Croatia, 6-1, 6-1. Standings: Djokovic 1-0 (2-0), Wawrinka 1-0 (2-0), Berdych 0-1 (0-2), Cilic 0-1 (0-2). Doubles GroupA Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (3), Brazil, def. Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (5), Roma- nia, 6-3, 3-6, 12-10. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, and Robert Lindstedt (8), Sweden, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Standings: Kubot-Lindstedt 1-0 (2-0), Peya-Soares 1-0 (2-1), Rojer-Tecau 0-1 (1-2), Bryan-Bryan 0-1 (0-2). Motorsports NASCARSPRINTCUPPOINTS LEADERS ThroughNov.9 1. Denny Hamlin, 5,000. 2. Joey Logano, 5,000. 3. Ryan Newman, 5,000. 4. Kevin Harvick, 5,000. 5. Brad Keselowski, 2,320. 6. Jeff Gordon, 2,312. 7. Matt Kenseth, 2,296. 8. Kyle Busch, 2,280. 9. Carl Edwards, 2,278. 10. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,271. 11. AJ Allmendinger, 2,256. 12. Greg Biffle, 2,244. 13. Jimmie Johnson, 2,239. 14. Kurt Busch, 2,229. 15. Kasey Kahne, 2,202. 16. Aric Almirola, 2,170. 17. Kyle Larson, 1,049. 18. Jamie McMurray, 975. 19. Clint Bowyer, 943. 20. Austin Dillon, 939. 21. Paul Menard, 904. 22. Brian Vickers, 900. 23. Marcos Ambrose, 853. 24. Martin Truex Jr., 830. 25. Tony Stewart, 798. Golf PGATOURSTATISTICS ThroughNov.9 FedExCupSeasonPoints 1, Robert Streb, 650.333. 2, Bae Sang- moon, 605.000. 3, Ben Martin, 574.250. 4, Bubba Watson, 550.000. 5, Ryan Moore, 540.500. 6, Tim Clark, 365.500. 7, Brendon de Jonge, 363.333. 8, Kevin Streelman, 355.500. 9, Steven Bowditch, 324.500. 10, Nick Taylor, 312.660. ScoringAverage 1, Bubba Watson, 68.526. 2 (tie), Graeme McDowell and Rickie Fowler, 68.776. 4, Chris Kirk, 68.985. 5, Webb Simpson, 69.097. 6, Fabian Gomez, 69.119. 7 (tie), Ian Poulter and Martin Kaymer, 69.276. 9, Robert Streb, 69.337. 10, Brian Harman, 69.444. DrivingDistance 1, Patrick Rodgers, 318.6. 2, Morgan Hoffmann, 318.5. 3, Brooks Koepka, 317.3. 4, Andres Romero, 317.0. 5, Charlie Beljan, 316.3. 6 (tie), Peter Uihlein and Tony Finau, 315.9. 8, Robert Garrigus, 314.5. 9, Jimmy Walker, 312.4. 10, Billy Horschel, 312.0. DrivingAccuracyPercentage 1, K.J. Choi, 87.50%. 2, David Toms, 78.57%. 3, Steven Alker, 77.38%. 4 (tie), Jason Knutzon and Jason Dufner, 75.89%. 6 (tie), Henrik Stenson, Spencer Levin and Guan Tian Liang, 75.00%. 9, Kevin Chappell, 74.29%. 10, Adam Scott, 73.81%. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For Nov. 11 NCAAFootball TONIGHT Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog Akron 3 3½ at Buffalo at N. Illinois OFF OFF Toledo TOMORROW at U Ma ss -x 2½ 3 ½ B al l S t. at Bowling Green 13 13 Kent St. THURSDAY East Carolina 1 2 at Cincinnati at UTSA OFF OFF Southern Miss. at Southern Cal 14½ 14 California FRIDAY at UCF 18 18 Tulsa SATURDAY at North Carolina 2 2 Pittsburgh at NC State 12½ 14 Wake Forest at Penn St. 10 10 Temple Ohio St. 12½ 12 at Minnesota Iowa 5½ 5½ at Illinois at W. Kentucky 10 10½ Army at W. Michigan 23½ 25½ E. Michigan at Wisconsin 6 6 Nebraska at Tennessee 7½ 7½ Kentucky at R ut ge rs 6½ 8 In dia na Clemson 1 3 at Georgia Tech at Duke 6½ 5½ Virginia Tech at Air Force +1 2 Nevada South Florida 10½ 11½ at SMU at South Alabama OFF OFF Texas St. TCU 28 28 at Kansas at Arkansas St. 14 13½ Appalachian St. at BYU 23½ 23½ UNLV at Stanford 8 7½ Utah at Utah St. 16 16 New Mexico at Boise St. 14 14 San Diego St. at Texas Tech OFF OFF Oklahoma at Arkansas 1 2½ LSU at Arizona 9 9 Washington at Georgia 2 2½ Auburn at Florida 5 6½ South Carolina Florida St. 2½ 2 at Miami at Navy 3½ 3 Georgia Southern at Marshall 19½ 21 Rice at Notre Dame 16 17 Northwestern at Cent. Michigan 14½ 15 Miami Middle Tenn. 3½ 4½ at FIU at San Jose St. 9½ 10½ Hawaii at Idaho 4 5 Troy at Texas A&M 5½ 5½ Missouri Memphis 10½ 11 at Tulane La.-Lafayette 7 7½ at Louisiana-Monroe Arizona St. 9 9½ at Oregon St. at Alabama 7 7 Mississippi St. Texas 1 2 at Oklahoma St. Michigan St. 11 12½ at Maryland at UTEP 6½ 6½ North Texas x-at McGuirk Stadium OFFKEY Toledo QB questionable Southern Miss. QB questionable South Alabama QB questionable Texas Tech QB questionable NFL THURSDAY Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog at Miami 5 (42) Buffalo SUNDAY at Cleveland 3 (42½) Houston at Chicago 3½ (47) Minnesota at Green Bay 6½ (53) Philadelphia at Kansas City 1½ (43) Seattle at Carolina 3 (47½) Atlanta at New Orleans 6½ (50½) Cincinnati at Washington 7 (45) Tampa Bay Denver 9½ (51) at St. Louis San Francisco 4 (43½) at N.Y. Giants at San Diego 10 (44½) Oakland at Arizona 1 (41½) Detroit at Indianapolis 2½ (57½) New England MONDAY Pittsburgh 5 (47) at Tennessee | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 2 B

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