Red Bluff Daily News

November 22, 2014

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Hydereplied:"Ifanything, I'd need to give tips to Mor- gan Moses on how to block Aldon, but I can't do that. Aldon's gone up against the best linemen in the game." Moses was a third-round draft pick by Washington, and his first significant ac- tion came in relief of Wil- liams in last Sunday's loss to Tampa Bay. "He was a beast," Hyde recalled of Moses' days at Fort Union. "My first 100-yard game there came from his side, just running behind him all game." Post-concussion symp- toms will prevent right tackle Anthony Davis from playing Sunday, Harbaugh said without elaborating on the severity of Davis' condition. Jonathan Mar- tin will start in place of Davis, as was the case in five earlier games this sea- son that Davis sat out be- cause of hamstring and/or knee injuries. Also ruled out Sunday is nose tackle Glenn Dorsey, who came off short-term injured reserve this week but remains "day to day" in his recovery from bi- ceps surgery. "I've just got to work with it, and it takes time," said Dorsey, who did not practice Thursday and Friday. Dorsey said he doesn't have any doubts he'll play this season. But with Ian Williams shelved for the season because of a bro- ken fibula, second-year defensive tackle Quinton Dial will make his second straight start. Chris Culliver's inter- ceptions each of the past two games have him red hot. "He's playing his best football right now," coach Jim Harbaugh said. "It's great to see that in his ex- ecution, in his effort, in his talent. I just love the competitive nature that he plays with." Last Sunday, Culliver produced the 49ers' fourth of five interceptions, doing so in a fourth quarter that later hinged on a goal-line stand where Culliver suc- cessfully defended a sec- ond-down fade pass. He also had solid coverage on a deep pass that fell in- complete down the side- line. Added Harbaugh: "He competes like a maniac. And he's doing it in a phys- ical way. That's important to our football team — to be physical. And to do that from the corner position is really good." 49ers FROMPAGE1 to make last night were downhill, unpopular be- tween-the-tackle runs. I felt Marcel could give us something there." • Sparano didn't see the humor in the premature sack celebration of line- backers Sio Moore and Khalil Mack that forced the Raiders to stop the clock on a timeout by Justin Tuck (Sparano was also gestur- ing for a timeout) with 28 seconds to play. Disaster was averted when Alex Smith threw incomplete on fourth- and-13, and Sparano knew the ramifications if the play had cost the Raiders the game. "I don't chuckle over it, no," Sparano said. "I can just imagine what the headline would be today." • During his time as a head coach in Miami and as a line coach in Dallas, Sparano said he has been awarded the game ball be- fore, but the one given to him by tackle Donald Penn on behalf of the team has a special meaning. "I say that because of what this team has gone through and how far we've come and how much the guys have stayed to- gether in the locker room," Sparano said. "But really, they're the ones that de- serve the game balls." • With fourth-and-1 at the Chiefs' 43-yard line and with all three timeouts, Sparano opted to go for the first down rather than attempt to punt the Chiefs inside the 10-yard line. Derek Carr responded with a 1-yard gainona quar- terback sneak and later con- verted a third-and-1 on the same play during the game- winning drive. "Thatwasourbestchance towinthegamerightthere," Sparano said. "I felt like we had some real momentum going at that point." Short-yardage plays have been a problem for the Raiders this season when handing the ball to a running back. Sparano said Carr assured him he would get the yard on fourth-and-1. "We felt like we were getting good push inside rather than take the ball off the line of scrimmage," Sparano said. • The Raiders are opti- mistic about having left guard Gabe Jackson (knee) and cornerback/return specialist TJ Carrie (an- kle) ready to face the Rams, Sparano said. Raiders FROM PAGE 1 Dillon adds heft to the San Jose blue line as he becomes the team's sec- ond biggest defenseman behind Brent Burns. In describing Dillon's assets, Sharks coach Todd McLel- lan also noted Dillon has "some bite" in his game. "It's an ingredient that maybe we lacked back there a little bit," McLel- lan said of Dillon's overall play. "Very good skater, excellent size, left-handed shot that plays an aggres- sive, hard game. He's a guy that can skate very well, jump into the play and then get back." His offensive numbers — one assist in 20 games this season, 26 points in 149 NHL games overall — do not match those of the 6-foot-1, 195 pound De- mers, who is more of a puck carrying, offensive-minded defenseman. Demers had a career high 34 points on five goals and 19 assists in 75 games last season. Overall, he had 98 points in exactly 300 games with San Jose, but had struggled this sea- son with only three assists in 20 games and a minus-6 rating. The Sharks rewarded Demers with a new two- year, $6.8 million contract last summer. Under terms of the trade, San Jose will pick up 35 percent of his salary through the end of next season. Dillon's $1.25 million contract expires at the end of this season, when he becomes a re- stricted free agent. "You never know. It's a business, right? These things happen," Demers said before leaving for a flight to Dallas, where he is likely to play Saturday night against the Los An- geles Kings. "I guess they saw a way to make the team better... Hopefully the team does well and hope- fully it's good for both of us." Sharks FROM PAGE 1 By Jon Wilner Bay Area News Group STANFORD The two words heard most often this week from members of the Stan- ford football program were not Big Game. They were tangible evidence. Tangible evidence — as in, The Axe. The Cardinal has pos- sessed the trophy that goes to the winner of the Big Game for four consec- utive years — its seniors have known nothing but victory against Cal. But Stanford will be play- ing for more than The Axe on Saturday at Memorial Stadium in Berkeley. It will be playing for that which cannot be held or seen and won't be heard (at least, not in any official sense). The Cardinal (5-5, 3-4, Pac-12) is playing to secure a .500 record and become bowl eligible. To salvage a season gone unfathomably awry. To sidestep a daunting win-or-go-home finale at No. 11 UCLA. And to avoid becoming the first Pac-12 champion this century to fail to reach the postseason the follow- ing year. (The last time it happened: The Cardinal in 1999.) The underlying paradox, of course, is that Stanford's prospects for reaching the postseason run counter to the weight assigned to reaching that goal. "As easy as it is to look past these next two games and think where we could end up in a bowl game, if we go to one, we really have to concentrate on this one," linebacker Kevin Anderson said. "We just have to fig- ure out how to beat Cal. "When you have the tan- gible evidence of The Axe, that makes it a little more special." The season has been any- thingbut specialfor theCar- dinal. Blown far off course by a meek offense, Stanford has dropped four of its past six and is only a 6 -point favorite over a team it beat by 50 one year ago. Stout defense is the only thing that has carried over from the teams that won the past two Pac-12 cham- pionships. This version lacks a bruis- ing tailback, dominant of- fensive line and dependable running game. Its efficiency on third down has disap- peared. Its knack for mak- ing big plays at just the right time(onoffense,defenseand special teams) has vanished. Not that the Bears (5-5, 3-5) are any better. They haven't beaten a ranked team and possess a defense that has allowed more points (397) than any unit in the conference. As bad as Stanford has been on of- fense, the Bears have been worse on defense. Previous Cardinal teams might be susceptible to overlooking an opponent they had dominated. But not this version — not af- ter the angst, frustration and malfunctions of the past six weeks. "We haven't earned the right to be overconfident about anything right now," coach David Shaw said. "We're trying to find a way to scrap and claw and find a way to get a win. A lot of great things hap- pened last year that haven't happened this year. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Stanford quarterback Kevin Hogan and the Cardinal football team have dropped four of their past six games and are only a 6 1/2-point favorite Saturday over a team it beat by 50points one year ago, the Cal Bears. Stanford goes for fi h in a row MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Scoreboard Football NFL AMERICANCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 7 3 0 .700 293 224 Kansas City 7 4 0 .636 261 195 San Diego 6 4 0 .600 218 192 Oakland 1 10 0 .091 176 285 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 8 2 0 .800 323 218 Miami 6 4 0 .600 249 180 Buffalo 5 5 0 .500 200 204 N.Y. Jets 2 8 0 .200 174 265 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 6 4 0 .600 310 253 Houston 5 5 0 .500 229 204 Tennessee 2 8 0 .200 168 250 Jacksonville 1 9 0 .100 158 282 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 3 1 .650 224 221 Pittsburgh 7 4 0 .636 288 263 Baltimore 6 4 0 .600 261 181 Cleveland 6 4 0 .600 216 195 NATIONALCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 9 1 0 .900 237 176 San Francisco6 4 0 .600 211 212 Seattle 6 4 0 .600 260 215 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 185 258 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 7 3 0 .700 299 251 Dallas 7 3 0 .700 261 212 N.Y. Giants 3 7 0 .300 205 263 Washington 3 7 0 .300 204 256 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 4 6 0 .400 238 255 New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 261 252 Carolina 3 7 1 .318 215 300 Tampa Bay 2 8 0 .200 194 279 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 7 3 0 .700 188 156 Green Bay 7 3 0 .700 330 225 Chicago 4 6 0 .400 215 290 Minnesota 4 6 0 .400 181 220 Thursday'sgame Oakland 24, Kansas City 20 Sunday'sgames Green Bay at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Cincinnati at Houston, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago, 10 a.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Detroit at New England, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, ppd., snow Arizona at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. St. Louis at San Diego, 1:05 p.m. Washington at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. Miami at Denver, 1:25 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 5:30 p.m. Open: Carolina, Pittsburgh Monday'sgames N.Y. Jets vs. Buffalo at Detroit, 4 p.m. Baltimore at New Orleans, 5:30 p.m. Thursday,Nov.27 Chicago at Detroit, 9:30 a.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 1:30 p.m. Seattle at San Francisco, 5:30 p.m. COLLEGEFOOTBALLPLAYOFF RANKINGS Nov. 18, 2014 Record 1. Alabama 9-1 2. Oregon 9-1 3. Florida St. 10-0 4. Mississippi St. 9-1 5. TCU 9-1 6. Ohio St. 9-1 7. Baylor 8-1 8. Mississippi 8-2 9. UCLA 8-2 10. Georgia 8-2 11. Michigan St. 8-2 12. Kansas St. 7-2 13. Arizona St. 8-2 14. Auburn 7-3 15. Arizona 8-2 16. Wisconsin 8-2 17. Utah 7-3 18. Georgia Tech 9-2 19. Southern Cal 7-3 20. Missouri 8-2 21. Oklahoma 7-3 22. Clemson 7-3 23. Nebraska 8-2 24. Louisville 7-3 25. Minnesota 7-3 The College Football Playoff Selection Committee will issue weekly rankings each Tuesday, with the final rankings being announced Sunday, Dec. 7. The playoff semifinals will match the No. 1 seed vs. the No. 4 seed, and No. 2 will face No. 3. The semifinals will be hosted at the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1, 2015. The championship game will be on Jan. 12, 2015 at Arlington, Texas. Basketball NBA WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 8 2 .800 — Clippers 7 4 .636 1½ Phoenix 8 5 .615 1½ Sacramento 7 5 .583 2 Lakers 3 10 .231 6½ SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 11 2 .846 — Dallas 10 3 .769 1 Houston 9 3 .750 1½ San Antonio 8 4 .667 2½ New Orleans 6 5 .545 4 NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 8 3 .727 — Utah 5 7 .417 3½ Denver 5 7 .417 3½ Minnesota 3 8 .273 5 Oklahoma City 3 11 .214 6½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 10 2 .833 — Brooklyn 5 7 .417 5 Boston 4 7 .364 5½ New York 3 10 .231 7½ Philadelphia 0 12 .000 10 SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Washington 8 3 .727 — Atlanta 6 5 .545 2 Miami 6 6 .500 2½ Orlando 6 8 .429 3½ Charlotte 4 9 .308 5 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Chicago 8 4 .667 — Milwaukee 7 6 .538 1½ Cleveland 5 6 .455 2½ Indiana 5 7 .417 3 Detroit 3 10 .231 5½ Thursday'sgames Clippers 110, Miami 93 Sacramento 103, Chicago 88 Friday'sgames Phoenix 122, Philadelphia 96 Orlando 105, Charlotte 100 Atlanta 99, Detroit 89 Toronto 124, Milwaukee 83 Brooklyn 94, Oklahoma City 92 Memphis 117, Boston 100 San Antonio 121, Minnesota 92 Washington 91, Cleveland 78 Dallas 140, Lakers 106 Denver 117, New Orleans 97 Utah at Golden State, (n.) Chicago at Portland, (n.) Saturday'sgames Miami at Orlando, 4 p.m. Phoenix at Indiana, 4 p.m. Toronto at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at New York, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Houston, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Washington at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Brooklyn at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. New Orleans at Utah, 6 p.m. NCAAMEN'STOP-25 Friday 1. Kentucky (4-0) 89, Boston University 65 2. Arizona (3-0) did not play 3. Wisconsin (3-0) did not play 4. Duke (4-0) 74, Temple 54 5. Kansas (1-1) did not play 6. North Carolina (2-0) did not play 7. Louisville (3-0) 87, Marshall 65 8. Florida (2-1) 61, Louisiana-Monroe 56 (OT) 9. Virginia (4-0) 59, George Washington 42 10. Texas (4-0) 71, California 55 11. Wichita State (2-0) did not play 12. Villanova (3-0) did not play 13. Gonzaga (3-0) did not play 14. Iowa State (2-0) did not play 15. VCU (3-0) did not play 16. San Diego State (3-0) did not play 17. UConn (3-0) 75, Dayton 64 18. Oklahoma (1-1) did not play 19. Michigan State (2-1) 87, Loyola of Chicago 52 20. Ohio State (2-0) did not play 21. Nebraska (2-0) did not play 22. SMU (1-2) did not play 23. Syracuse (3-1) 66, Iowa 63 24. Michigan (3-0) did not play 25. Utah (2-1) 88, UC Riverside 42 NCAAMEN'SFARWEST Colorado St. 80, Georgia St. 70 Grand Canyon 64, Florida A&M 49 Oregon 78, Toledo 68 Utah 88, UC Riverside 42 Stanford89,UNLV60 UNLV(2-1) Wood 4-10 3-5 12, Okonoboh 2-8 0-0 4, Vaughn 2-9 3-5 7, Kendrick 4-6 0-2 9, Doo- lin 2-5 2-2 6, Mccaw 4-8 0-0 10, Cornish 2-5 2-3 6, Morgan 2-6 1-2 6, Walker 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 22-58 11-19 60. STANFORD(3-0) Travis 4-7 1-1 9, R. Allen 5-9 4-4 15, Nastic 3-13 4-8 10, Randle 6-10 0-0 18, Brown 6-11 2-2 18, Sanders 0-1 0-0 0, Cartwright 2-3 0-0 5, Humphrey 0-1 2-2 2, Pickens 2-2 0-0 6, Mar. Allen 2-2 0-2 4, Morgan 1-1 0-0 2, Bullock 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 31-62 13-19 89. Halftime: Stanford 52-29;3-PointGoals: UNLV 5-18 (Mccaw 2-4, Kendrick 1-1, Morgan 1-2, Wood 1-4, Walker 0-1, Doolin 0-1, Cornish 0-2, Vaughn 0-3), Stanford 14-20 (Randle 6-10, Brown 4-5, Pickens 2-2, Cartwright 1-1, R. Allen 1-2); FouledOut: Humphrey;Rebounds: Unlv 29 (Wood 11), Stanford 47 (Brown 9); Assists: Unlv 10 (Doolin 4), Stanford 19 (Brown 5);TotalFouls: Unlv 18, Stanford 20;A: Na. No.10Texas71,California55 TEXAS(4-0) Holmes 6-11 8-10 21, Lammert 2-4 2-4 6, Ridley 2-5 5-6 9, Holland 2-4 7-7 11, Felix 2-8 4-4 9, Yancy 1-6 3-4 6, Ibeh 2-3 0-0 4, Turner 2-8 1-2 5. Totals 19-49 30-37 71. CALIFORNIA(3-1) Behrens 1-2 0-1 2, Bird 2-8 0-0 5, Krav- ish 8-18 2-3 19, Wallace 5-17 6-10 16, Mathews 3-12 3-6 10, Tarwater 0-2 0-0 0, Singer 0-2 0-0 0, Moute a Bidias 0-1 0-0 0, Okoroh 1-2 1-2 3, Rooks 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-64 12-22 55. Halftime: Texas 31-21;3-PointGoals: Texas 3-11 (Yancy 1-2, Holmes 1-3, Felix 1-4, Turner 0-1, Holland 0-1), California 3-12 (Bird 1-2, Kravish 1-2, Mathews 1-4, Singer 0-2, Tarwater 0-2);FouledOut: Behrens. Rebounds_Texas 46 (Holmes 13), California 36 (Wallace 8);Assists: Texas 10 (Felix 4), California 6 (Wallace 4);TotalFouls: Texas 18, California 28. Technicals_Ridley, Moute a Bidias;A: 11,255. NCAAWOMEN'STOP-25 Friday 1. UConn (1-1) did not play 2. South Carolina (2-0) did not play 3. Notre Dame (3-0) 88, Chattanooga 53 4. Tennessee (3-0) 81, Winthrop 48 5. Texas A&M (4-0) did not play 6. Stanford (2-1) did not play 7. Duke (2-0) did not play 8. Baylor (1-1) did not play 9. Maryland (3-0) did not play 10. Texas (2-0) did not play 11. North Carolina (3-0) did not play 12. Louisville (3-0) did not play 13. Kentucky (3-0) did not play 14. California (2-0) at Hawaii, (n.) 15. Michigan State (1-1) did not play 16. Nebraska (3-0) did not play 17. West Virginia (3-0) did not play 18. DePaul (3-1) did not play 18. Iowa (3-0) 97, Pepperdine 68 20. Oregon State (2-0) did not play 21. Oklahoma State (2-1) did not play 22. Rutgers (2-0) did not play 23. Syracuse (2-0) did not play 24. Georgia (3-0) did not play 24. Gonzaga (3-0) 89, Montana State 60 24. Purdue (1-1) did not play NCAAWOMEN'SFARWEST Southern Cal 90, Long Beach St. 85, OT NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 21 12 4 5 29 58 53 Vancouver 20 13 6 1 27 61 60 Los Angeles 20 11 5 4 26 53 44 Calgary 21 12 7 2 26 66 57 San Jose 22 10 9 3 23 59 60 Arizona 20 8 10 2 18 49 62 Edmonton 19 6 11 2 14 48 65 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 19 12 5 2 26 54 40 St. Louis 19 12 6 1 25 50 39 Chicago 19 11 7 1 23 55 39 Winnipeg 21 10 8 3 23 43 47 Minnesota 18 11 7 0 22 53 41 Dallas 20 7 9 4 18 56 68 Colorado 20 6 9 5 17 49 64 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 21 15 5 1 31 59 52 Tampa Bay 21 13 6 2 28 75 59 Boston 21 13 8 0 26 57 52 Detroit 19 10 4 5 25 54 45 Ottawa 18 9 5 4 22 50 47 Toronto 20 10 8 2 22 63 62 Florida 17 7 5 5 19 38 44 Buffalo 20 5 13 2 12 34 69 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 18 13 3 2 28 68 40 N.Y. Islanders 19 13 6 0 26 64 56 Washington 19 9 7 3 21 55 52 N.Y. Rangers 19 8 7 4 20 52 58 New Jersey 19 8 9 2 18 47 56 Philadelphia 18 7 9 2 16 53 58 Carolina 19 6 10 3 15 45 58 Columbus 19 6 11 2 14 47 68 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday'sgames Anaheim 4, Vancouver 3, SO Florida 3, San Jose 2, SO Minnesota 3, Philadelphia 2 Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 2 Montreal 4, St. Louis 1 Ottawa 3, Nashville 2 Detroit 4, Winnipeg 3 Dallas 3, Arizona 1 Washington 3, Colorado 2 Chicago 4, Calgary 3 Los Angeles 3, Carolina 2 Friday'sgames N.Y. Islanders 5, Pittsburgh 4, SO Boston 4, Columbus 3, SO N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, ppd., snow New Jersey at Edmonton, (n.) Saturday'sgames St. Louis at Ottawa, noon Montreal at Boston, 4 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Columbus at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Buffalo at Washington, 4 p.m. Florida at Nashville, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at Dallas, 5 p.m. Carolina at Colorado, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Calgary, 7 p.m. Chicago at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Arizona at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Golf DPWORLDTOURCHAMPIONSHIP LEADING Friday At Jumeirah Estates (Earth Course) Dubai, United Arab Emirates Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,675;Par: 72 SecondRound Henrik Stenson, Sweden.......... 68-66—134 Danny Willett, England.............69-67—136 Richie Ramsay, Scotland ..........67-69—136 Rory McIlroy, N.Ireland.............66-70—136 Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Spain....... 73-64—137 Justin Rose, England .................71-66—137 Kristoffer Broberg, Sweden.....70-67—137 Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark ....67-70—137 Shane Lowry, Ireland ................66-71—137 David Howell, England ..............71-67—138 Tyrrell Hatton, England............ 70-68—138 Branden Grace, South Africa...72-67—139 Victor Dubuisson, France.........71-68—139 Robert Karlsson, Sweden.........71-68—139 Hennie Otto, South Africa........71-68—139 Joost Luiten, Netherlands ....... 70-69—139 Stephen Gallacher, Scotland ...72-68—140 Darren Fichardt, South Africa .72-68—140 Thomas Bjorn, Denmark...........71-69—140 Pablo Larrazabal, Spain ...........71-69—140 George Coetzee, South Africa.70-70—140 Louis Oosthuizen, S. Africa......69-71—140 Martin Kaymer, Germany.........72-69—141 Lee Westwood, England........... 70-71—141 Luke Donald, England................76-66—142 Ernie Els, South Africa ..............75-67—142 Sergio Garcia, Spain..................73-69—142 Jamie Donaldson, Wales...........72-69—142 Graeme McDowell, N. Ireland..72-70—142 Charl Schwartzel, S. Africa...... 72-71—143 CMEGROUPTOUR CHAMPIONSHIP Friday At The Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort (Tiburon Course) Naples, Fla. Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,540;Par: 72 SecondRound Carlota Ciganda.....................70-67—137 -7 Julieta Granada......................66-71—137 -7 Morgan Pressel.....................72-66—138 -6 Michelle Wie .......................... 72-67—139 -5 Sarah Jane Smith ..................70-69—139 -5 Sandra Gal...............................68-71—139 -5 Chella Choi............................. 71-69—140 -4 So Yeon Ryu ........................... 70-70—140 -4 Moriya Jutanugarn ................74-67—141 -3 Brittany Lang..........................74-68—142 -2 Jennifer Johnson................... 73-69—142 -2 Jenny Shin ...............................72-70—142 -2 Lydia Ko ................................... 71-71—142 -2 Belen Mozo..............................69-73—142 -2 Catriona Matthew................. 75-68—143 -1 Shanshan Feng.......................74-69—143 -1 Cristie Kerr..............................73-70—143 -1 Karine Icher ............................72-71—143 -1 Brittany Lincicome................72-71—143 -1 Na Yeon Choi...........................71-72—143 -1 I.K. Kim.....................................71-72—143 -1 Ilhee Lee ..................................71-72—143 -1 Suzann Pettersen ..................71-72—143 -1 Tennis DAVISCUPRESULTS WORLDGROUP Final Switzerland1,France1 AtStadePierreMauroy Lille,France Surface: Clay-Indoor Singles Stan Wawrinka, Switzerland, def. Jo- Wilfried Tsonga, France, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Gael Monfils, France, def. Roger Federer, Switzerland, 6-1, 6-4, 6-3. Soccer MLSPLAYOFFS 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 Seattlevs.LAGalaxy Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 23: Seattle at LA Galaxy, 2 p.m. Leg2— Sunday, Nov. 30: LA Galaxy at Seattle, 6 p.m. MLSCup Sunday,Dec.7: New England-New York winner at LA Galaxy-Seattle winner,noon Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For Nov. 22 NFL TOMORROW Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog at Atlanta 3 (47) Cleveland at Philadelphia 11 (48½) Tennessee at New England 7 (48) Detroit Green Bay 8½ (48½) at Minnesota at Indianapolis 14 (50½) Jacksonville at Houston 1½ (43½) Cincinnati at Chicago 6 (46½) Tampa Bay at Seattle 7 (41) Arizona at San Diego 5 (43½) St. Louis at Denver 7 (48) Miami at SF 9 (44) Washington Dallas 3½ (47½) at N.Y. Giants MONDAY at New Orleans 3½ (50) Baltimore Buffalo-x 3 (41½) N.Y. Jets x-at Detroit NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog Miami 1 (192) at Orlando Phoenix 2½ (200) at Indiana at Cleveland 4 (209½) Toronto at New York 11½ (202) Philadelphia Sacramento 5 (207) at Minnesota at Houston Pk (202) Dallas at San Antonio 8½ (194½) Brooklyn Washington 2½ (198½) at Milwaukee New Orleans 4 (204) at Utah NHL Favorite Line Underdog St. Louis -140/+120 at Ottawa at Tampa Bay -135/+115 Minnesota at Boston -130/+110 Montreal at Philadelphia -170/+150 Columbus Pittsburgh -120/+100 at N.Y. Islanders at Washington -300/+240 Buffalo Detroit -115/-105 at Toronto at Nashville -200/+170 Florida Los Angeles -115/-105 at Dallas at Colorado -160/+140 Carolina Chicago -180/+160 at Edmonton at Calgary -145/+125 New Jersey at San Jose -170/+150 Arizona | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2014 2 B

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