Red Bluff Daily News

February 03, 2017

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CONTRIBUTED TheTopFuelerwrestlingteamfromRedBluffplacedthirdintheEastsideClassic Tournament at Foothill High School in Redding recently. Placing in the tournament were Gabe Crump first, Jimmy Beckwith first, Jennifer Soto second, Gunner Bonner second, Blake Miller second, Hunter Bonner second, Jordan Doughty second, Brice Clinger second, Leland Gridley second, Bainan Dion second, Dakota Bunn third, Makenna Bunn third, Barett Byrne third, Seth Miller third, Tyler Peyerson third, Alex Eye third, Corbin Domoe third, Tommy Webb third, Kolby Williams fourth and Adam Peterson fourth. TOPFUELER WRESTLERS PLACE HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL Pebblebrook vs. Wheeler: 2:30p.m., ESPNU. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL Rhode Island at Davidson: 4 p.m., ESPN2. Iona vs. Rider: 4p.m., ESPNU. Buffalo vs. Ball State: 6p.m., ESPNU. COLLEGE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL USC vs. Stanford: 6p.m., PAC12BA. UCLA vs. California: 8p.m., PAC12BA. NBA BASKETBALL Los Angeles Lakers at Boston Celtics: 5p.m., ESPN. Dallas Mavericks at Portland Trail Blazers: 7:30p.m., ESPN. Phoenix Suns at Sacramento Kings: 7:30p.m., CSN. GOLF PGA Tour, Phoenix Open, Round 2: noon, GOLF. EPGA Tour, Dubai Desert Classic, Round 3: 12:30a.m., GOLF. HOCKEY College, Notre Dame vs. Ver- mont: 4:30p.m., NBCSN. NHL, New York Islanders at Detroit Red Wings: 4:30p.m., NHL. WHL, Calgary Flames at Vancouver Canucks: 7:30p.m., NHL. SOCCER FIFA International Friendly, Jamaica vs. United States: 4:30p.m., FS1. EPL, Arsenal at Chelsea: 4:25 a.m., NBCSN. TENNIS ITF, Davis Cup World Group First Round CRO vs. ESP: 6 a.m., TENNIS. ITF, Davis Cup World Group First Round CRO vs. ESP: 9 a.m., TENNIS. ITF, Davis Cup USA vs. SUI and AUS vs. CZE: 1p.m., TEN- NIS. On the air Maya Cruz scored for the Spartans and sopho- more Megan Thompson recorded an assist. Goaltender Grace Thornton allowed one goal off the foot to the Hornets' Madi Matthews, but had four saves for the tie. The Spartans (7-7-4 over- all, 1-3-3 league) are sched- uled to visit Chico to take on the Panthers (14-3-1 overall, 6-0-1 league) at 3:15 p.m. Friday. Soccer FROM PAGE 1 The scoring slowed in the third quarter, with three minutes of score- less play in the period, but the teams played even at 13 to keep the Cardinals' margin intact at 55-39 af- ter three. The Honkers made a charge in the closing pe- riod, when Corning played many of its bench play- ers, at one point without a starter on the floor, to keep the final score from being too lopsided. Zoppi led the Cards with 19 points, five rebounds and four assists; Hoag had 17 points, six rebounds and three assists; Busta had 13 points, five rebounds and an assist; Austin Mishoe had 11 points, including a trio of 3s, four rebounds and four assists; Daniel Vazquez had four points, Caleb Delong had three points and Marc Leng- tat, Brian Coffey and Tyler Grine each had two, with Grine pulling down four re- bounds. Seniors Coffey, Grine and Marco Tapia were rec- ognized prior to tipoff for Senior Night. All three started. The Cardinals (21-0 over- all, 5-0 league) visit Orland on Friday for a 7:30 p.m. tipoff against the Trojans (9-12 overall, 2-2 league). The Cardinals beat the Trojans 51-41 on Dec. 13 in Corning. Cardinals FROM PAGE 1 people, they'll run through a wall for you." Belichick, a people per- son? The same might have been said, or asked, about Noll, Landry, Saban or any of these coaches, whose time facing the public usu- ally involves 5- and 10-min- ute segments with the me- dia during which their main goal is to not reveal anything important about their game plan — or much about themselves. The effort — and some- times, accolades — they get from their players says more. Terry Bradshaw couldn't stand Noll on their way to winning four Super Bowls with Pittsburgh. Only years later did the Hall of Fame quarterback con- cede that he benefited from Noll's coaching. "Did I re- spect him? Of course I did," Bradshaw said last year. "Like him? No, I didn't like him." Among the 15 blocks on Wooden's famed pyramid of success is "self-control," an attribute that applies to the players as well as the coaches and general man- agers choosing them. In a recent talk he gave to a group of coaches, Popo- vich spoke of the virtually mandatory requirement to resist talented players who are more focused on them- selves than the team. "That's not easy," he said. "You have to follow through, be good to your principles. That person who's going to be good, who has potential, that's going to get you fired." A lot has been made this year of New England's deci- sion to part ways with two key cogs in its defense — Chandler Jones in the off- season, then linebacker Ja- mie Collins, who was (ruth- lessly?) traded away to winless Cleveland in Octo- ber. That defense still al- lowed the fewest points in the league. Belichick is hardly the first coach faced with those sorts of choices. In the '70s, Landry spent a season shuf- fling between Roger Stau- bach and Craig Morton at quarterback. Eventually, he recognized the Cow- boys could only succeed with one of them, and he chose Staubach, while trad- ing Morton to the Giants. "Sometimes it is unfor- tunate to have to make such a decision," Landry said at the time. "But it is important to clear the air so there is no speculation on it from week to week." Tom Thibodeau, coach of the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves, spent time with Belichick a few sum- mers ago and said he mar- vels because "the infra- structure is so strong" — one factor that allows great coaches to say goodbye to key players without miss- ing a beat. "You either conform and become a team-first guy, or you won't be there long," Thibodeau said. "I think every player really wants discipline. And they want to win. So when you give them the environment, they'll usually respond in a positive way." But while the great coaches demand disci- pline, they also figure out ways to get their teams to bond. Former coach Pack- ers coach Vince Lombardi had a well-earned reputa- tion as a taskmaster, and yet one epiphany that took him over the top was the concept, virtually unheard of at the time, that the word "love" really did be- long in a locker room. More recently, Tom Coughlin overdid disci- pline for most of his first 10 years in the NFL. Only when he let up a bit, then got Michael Strahan on board, did the Giants be- come winners. This year's other Super Bowl coach, Dan Quinn of the Falcons, has discussed his season-long quest to turn his group of players into a "brotherhood." Belichick will never be confused as warm-and- fuzzy, though maybe Vince Wilfork's tweet after part- ing with the Patriots in 2014 painted the best pic- ture about the sort of atmo- sphere the coach has cre- ated: "We are always fam- ily," Wilfork wrote. And while great coaches have some hard-and-fast rules about how they want to run their teams, the best of them are always keep- ing an open mind toward learning. Famous are the stories of Belichick's willingness to go the extra mile — es- pecially in the film room — from the time he got his first NFL job, as an as- sistant to Colts coach Ted Marchibroda in 1975. "The impression he made on colleagues was almost universally favor- able — open-minded, in- credibly hard-working, ab- solutely committed to be- ing a little better every day ... a master at using film," wrote David Halberstam in his 2005 profile on Belich- ick, "The Education of a Coach." Super FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL WILD-CARD PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 7 Houston27,Oakland14 Seattle 26, Detroit 6 Sunday, Jan. 8 Pittsburgh 30, Miami 12 Green Bay 38, N.Y. Giants 13 DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 14 Atlanta 36, Seattle 20 New England 34, Houston 16 Sunday, Jan. 15 Green Bay 34, Dallas 31 Pittsburgh 18, Kansas City 16 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday, Jan. 22 NFC Atlanta 44, Green Bay 21 AFC New England 36, Pittsburgh 17 PRO BOWL Sunday, Jan. 29 At Orlando, Fla. AFC 20, NFC 13 SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 5 At Houston Atlanta vs. New England, 3:30 p.m. (FOX) NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 42 7 .857 — Clippers 31 18 .633 11 Sacramento 19 30 .388 23 Lakers 17 35 .327 261/2 Phoenix 15 34 .306 27 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 38 11 .776 — Houston 36 17 .679 4 Memphis 30 21 .588 9 Dallas 19 30 .388 19 New Orleans 19 31 .380 191/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Utah 31 19 .620 — Oklahoma City 28 22 .560 3 Portland 22 28 .440 9 Denver 21 27 .438 9 Minnesota 19 30 .388 111/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 31 18 .633 — Toronto 30 20 .600 11/2 New York 22 29 .431 10 Philadelphia 18 31 .367 13 Brooklyn 9 40 .184 22 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 29 20 .592 — Atlanta 29 21 .580 1/2 Charlotte 23 27 .460 61/2 Miami 20 30 .400 91/2 Orlando 19 32 .373 11 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 33 15 .688 — Indiana 26 22 .542 7 Chicago 25 25 .500 9 Detroit 22 27 .449 111/2 Milwaukee 21 27 .438 12 Wednesday's games Cleveland 125, Minnesota 97 Indiana 98, Orlando 88 Boston 109, Toronto 104 Detroit 118, New Orleans 98 Miami 116, Atlanta 93 New York 95, Brooklyn 90 Dallas 113, Philadelphia 95 Clippers 124, Phoenix 114 Memphis 119, Denver 99 Utah 104, Milwaukee 88 Chicago 128, Oklahoma City 100 Golden State 126, Charlotte 111 Thursday's games Washington 116, Lakers 108 Atlanta 113, Houston 108 San Antonio 102, Philadelphia 86 Golden State at Clippers, (n) Friday's games Toronto at Orlando, 4 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at Houston, 5 p.m. Lakers at Boston, 5 p.m. Memphis at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Denver, 6 p.m. Dallas at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Sacramento, 7:30 p.m. Saturday's games Detroit at Indiana, 4 p.m. New Orleans at Washington, 4 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 4:30 p.m. Cleveland at New York, 5:30 p.m. Charlotte at Utah, 6 p.m. Denver at San Antonio, 6 p.m. Memphis at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Milwaukee at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Golden State at Sacramento, 7:30 p.m. Sunday's games Toronto at Brooklyn, 9 a.m. Clippers at Boston, 11 a.m. Portland at Oklahoma City, noon Warriors 126, Hornets 111 (Wednesday's game) HORNETS (111) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-11 0-0 8, Hawes 2-6 0-0 4, Williams 6-13 0-0 14, Walker 1-5 5-5 7, Batum 4-7 2-2 13, Wood 1-1 2-2 4, Kaminsky 9-14 4-4 24, Sessions 0-3 1-2 1, Roberts 2-3 4-4 8, Graham 1-3 2-2 5, Be- linelli 6-11 3-3 16, Lamb 3-11 1-2 7. Totals 39-88 24-26 111. WARRIORS (126) Durant 7-17 3-3 18, Green 3-10 0-0 8, McGee 4-7 1-1 9, Curry 14-20 0-0 39, Thompson 10-19 3-3 29, McAdoo 1-3 0-0 2, Looney 1-2 0-1 2, Varejao 1-2 0-0 2, Jones 1-1 2-2 4, Clark 1-6 0-0 2, Iguodala 3-4 0-0 6, McCaw 1-5 2-4 5. Totals 47-96 11-14 126. Charlotte 21 35 27 28 — 111 Golden State 41 36 31 18 — 126 3-Point Goals: Charlotte 9-31 (Batum 3-4, Kaminsky 2-6, Williams 2-6, Graham 1-1, Belinelli 1-5, Sessions 0-1, Roberts 0-1, Hawes 0-1, Walker 0-3, Lamb 0-3), Golden State 21-48 (Curry 11-15, Thompson 6-10, Green 2-7, McCaw 1-4, Durant 1-7, Iguodala 0-1, Looney 0-1, Clark 0-3); Fouled out: None; Rebounds: Charlotte 45 (Kidd-Gilchrist 9), Golden State 47 (Green 10); Assists: Charlotte 32 (Belinelli, Batum 7), Golden State 35 (Durant, Thompson, Curry 8); Total fouls: Charlotte 14, Golden State 18; Technicals: Golden State defensive three second 2, Golden State team 2; A: 19,596 (19,596). LEADERS Through FEBRUARY 1 SCORING G FG FT Pts Avg Westbrook, OKC50 498 431 1533 30.7 Thomas, BOS 45 420 355 1337 29.7 Harden, HOU 52 427 468 1479 28.4 Cousins, SAC 48 449 371 1353 28.2 Davis, NOR 46 467 326 1282 27.9 DeRozan, TOR 45 448 338 1250 27.8 Lillard, POR 45 385 295 1178 26.2 Durant, GOL 49 456 273 1280 26.1 James, CLE 45 429 225 1155 25.7 Leonard, SAN 44 371 294 1127 25.6 Curry, GOL 48 406 204 1215 25.3 Butler, CHI 48 364 394 1179 24.6 Irving, CLE 43 386 166 1040 24.2 McCollum, POR 50 436 169 1168 23.4 Lowry, TOR 49 360 258 1140 23.3 Anttknmpo, MIL 47 395 260 1084 23.1 Towns, MIN 49 438 194 1128 23.0 Anthony, NYK 50 415 217 1149 23.0 Walker, CHA 49 399 190 1123 22.9 Wall, WAS 46 387 224 1046 22.7 REBOUNDS G Off Def Tot Avg Whiteside, MIA 45 165 457 622 13.8 Jordan, LAC 49 178 497 675 13.8 Drummond, DET 48 190 465 655 13.6 Howard, ATL 44 190 373 563 12.8 Gobert, UTA 50 188 441 629 12.6 Davis, NOR 46 108 456 564 12.3 Towns, MIN 49 164 420 584 11.9 Chandler, PHX 40 139 331 470 11.8 Gortat, WAS 48 148 397 545 11.4 Love, CLE 41 102 349 451 11.0 College basketball MEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. Gonzaga (22-0) at BYU. 2. Baylor (20-2) did not play. 3. Kansas (20-2) did not play. 4. Villanova (21-2) did not play. 5. Arizona (21-2) beat Oregon State 71-54. 6. Louisville (18-4) did not play. 7. West Virginia (18-4) did not play. 8. Kentucky (18-4) did not play. 9. Virginia (17-4) did not play. 10. Wisconsin (19-3) did not play. 11. UCLA (20-3) did not play. 12. North Carolina (20-4) did not play. 13. Oregon (19-3) vs. Arizona State. 14. Cincinnati (20-2) did not play. 15. Florida State (19-4) did not play. 16. Butler (18-5) did not play. 17. Maryland (20-2) did not play. 18. Saint Mary's (19-2) at Pacific. 19. South Carolina (18-4) did not play. 20. Notre Dame (17-6) did not play. 21. Duke (17-5) did not play. 22. Creighton (20-3) did not play. 23. Purdue (18-5) did not play. 24. Florida (17-5) beat Missouri 93-54. 25. Northwestern (18-5) did not play. FAR WEST E. Washington 77, Sacramento St. 72 WOMEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. UConn (21-0) did not play. 2. Baylor (22-1) did not play. 3. Maryland (22-1) beat Purdue 85-70. 4. South Carolina (19-2) beat No. 25 Kentucky 75-63. 5. Mississippi State (22-1) beat Auburn 77-47. 6. Florida State (21-2) beat Boston Col- lege 85-53. 7. Notre Dame (21-3) beat Virginia Tech 76-59. 8. Stanford (19-3) did not play. 9. Louisville (20-5) lost to No. 19 N.C. State 72-70, OT. 10. Washington (20-3) did not play. 11. Oregon State (20-2) did not play. 12. Texas (17-4) did not play. 13. UCLA (17-4) did not play. 14. Ohio State (20-5) did not play. 15. Duke (19-4) beat Clemson 65-37. 16. Miami (17-5) beat Wake Forest 79-56. 17. DePaul (18-5) did not play. 18. Oklahoma (17-6) did not play. 19. N.C. State (17-6) beat No. 9 Louisville 72-70, OT. 20. South Florida (18-3) did not play. 21. Green Bay (19-3) lost to Oakland 74-71. 22. West Virginia (16-6) did not play. 23. Arizona State (14-7) did not play. 24. Syracuse (16-7) beat Pittsburgh 93-65. 25. Kentucky (15-8) lost to No. 4 South Carolina 75-63. FAR WEST Gonzaga 87, BYU 52 Idaho St. 64, N. Arizona 51 UC Davis 61, Cal Poly 53 UC Riverside 63, Hawaii 45 Weber St. 73, S. Utah 68 NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 51 32 17 2 66 138 117 Anaheim 52 28 15 9 65 138 130 Edmonton 53 28 17 8 64 154 139 Los Angeles 51 26 21 4 56 131 123 Calgary 53 26 24 3 55 139 150 Vancouver 50 23 21 6 52 119 140 Arizona 49 16 27 6 38 110 155 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 50 33 12 5 71 166 116 Chicago 52 30 17 5 65 143 135 Nashville 51 25 18 8 58 142 134 Winnipeg 54 25 25 4 54 159 167 St. Louis 50 24 21 5 53 141 157 Dallas 52 21 21 10 52 144 164 Colorado 48 13 33 2 28 94 166 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 52 30 15 7 67 156 130 Ottawa 49 27 16 6 60 137 131 Boston 54 26 22 6 58 138 143 Toronto 48 23 16 9 55 148 139 Florida 51 22 19 10 54 122 142 Buffalo 50 20 20 10 50 121 143 Tampa Bay 52 22 24 6 50 141 155 Detroit 50 20 21 9 49 126 148 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 51 34 11 6 74 167 112 Columbus 49 33 12 4 70 166 118 Pittsburgh 49 31 13 5 67 176 143 N.Y. Rangers 51 32 18 1 65 173 136 Philadelphia 52 26 20 6 58 144 161 N.Y. Islanders 48 22 17 9 53 139 138 Carolina 49 22 20 7 51 131 141 New Jersey 51 21 21 9 51 117 147 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday's games Washington 5, Boston 3 Calgary 5, Minnesota 1 Los Angeles 5, Colorado 0 Thursday's games Philadelphia 3, Montreal 1 N.Y. Rangers 2, Buffalo 1, OT Ottawa 5, Tampa Bay 2 Nashville 2, Edmonton 0 Winnipeg 4, Dallas 3 Chicago at Arizona, (n) Toronto at St. Louis, (n) San Jose at Vancouver, (n) Friday's games Columbus at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Calgary at New Jersey, 4:30 p.m. Edmonton at Carolina, 4:30 p.m. Anaheim at Florida, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Saturday's games Los Angeles at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Washington at Montreal, 10 a.m. Winnipeg at Colorado, noon Toronto at Boston, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Columbus, 4 p.m. Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 5 p.m. Detroit at Nashville, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Arizona at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Sunday's games Los Angeles at Washington, 9 a.m. Edmonton at Montreal, 10 a.m. Calgary at N.Y. Rangers, 11 a.m. NHL SCORING LEADERS Through Wednesday GP G A Pts Connor McDavid, EDM 52 17 42 59 Sidney Crosby, PIT 43 28 28 56 Brad Marchand, BOS 54 23 31 54 Evgeni Malkin, PIT 47 22 32 54 Brent Burns, SJ 51 21 32 53 Mark Scheifele, WPG 50 23 28 51 Nicklas Backstrom, WAS51 14 37 51 Vladimir Tarasenko, STL50 22 27 49 Tyler Seguin, DAL 51 18 31 49 Patrick Kane, CHI 52 15 34 49 Alex Ovechkin, WAS 51 25 22 47 Leon Draisaitl, EDM 52 20 27 47 Phil Kessel, PIT 49 15 32 47 Jeff Carter, LA 51 26 20 46 Cam Atkinson, CLS 49 24 22 46 3 tied with 45 pts. Golf PHOENIX OPEN PAR Thursday At TPC Scottsdale Scottsdale, Ariz. Purse: $6.7 million Yardage: 7,266; Par 71 (35-36) Partial First Round Matt Kuchar..............................33-31—64 -7 Hideki Matsuyama.................. 33-32—65 -6 Brendan Steele........................35-30—65 -6 John Peterson.......................... 34-32—66 -5 Robert Garrigus ...................... 32-34—66 -5 Scott Brown ............................. 32-34—66 -5 Byeong Hun An........................33-33—66 -5 Chris Kirk..................................33-33—66 -5 Rickie Fowler ...........................33-34—67 -4 J.B. Holmes...............................34-33—67 -4 Steve Stricker ..........................34-33—67 -4 Brooks Koepka ........................ 35-32—67 -4 Alex Cejka.................................33-34—67 -4 Martin Laird............................. 35-32—67 -4 Webb Simpson.........................33-34—67 -4 Graham DeLaet .......................33-34—67 -4 Marc Leishman........................35-33—68 -3 Louis Oosthuizen ....................34-34—68 -3 Vaughn Taylor.......................... 32-36—68 -3 Chad Collins.............................34-34—68 -3 Lucas Glover............................33-35—68 -3 Ryo Ishikawa............................34-34—68 -3 Phil Mickelson ......................... 32-36—68 -3 Cameron Smith ........................37-32—69 -2 Ben Crane................................. 35-34—69 -2 William McGirt ........................ 34-35—69 -2 Shane Lowry............................ 33-36—69 -2 Morgan Hoffmann .................. 35-34—69 -2 Ken Duke................................... 36-33—69 -2 Mark Hubbard ..........................32-37—69 -2 Justin Thomas ......................... 35-34—69 -2 Bubba Watson......................... 34-35—69 -2 Brian Harman .......................... 34-35—69 -2 Leaderboard at time of suspended play Golfer ...................................Score Through Matt Kuchar........................................... -7/F Hideki Matsuyama............................... -6/F Brendan Steele..................................... -6/F John Peterson....................................... -5/F Robert Garrigus ................................... -5/F Scott Brown .......................................... -5/F Byeong Hun An..................................... -5/F Chris Kirk............................................... -5/F DUBAI DESERT CLASSIC LEADING Thursday At Emirates GC Dubai, United Arab Emirates Purse: $2.65 million Yardage: 7,328; Par: 72 First Round Sergio Garcia, Spain.................................65 Felipe Aguilar, Chile..................................66 George Coetzee, South Africa................66 Ian Poulter, England.................................67 David Lipsky, United States ....................67 Nacho Elvira, Spain...................................67 Nino Bertasio, Italy...................................67 Graeme McDowell, N. Ireland.................68 Ryan Fox, New Zealand............................68 Jorge Campillo, Spain ..............................68 Rayhan Thomas, India .............................68 Henrik Stenson, Sweden..........................68 Mikko Ilonen, Finland...............................69 Lasse Jensen, Denmark...........................69 Maximilian Kieffer, Germany..................69 Scott Jamieson, Scotland........................69 Renato Paratore, Italy..............................69 Peter Uihlein, United States....................69 Prom Meesawat, Thailand......................69 Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark ...................69 Jordan Smith, England.............................69 Wade Ormsby, Australia..........................69 Matthew Fitzpatrick, England................69 Anirban Lahiri, India.................................69 Daniel Im, United States..........................74 Paul Peterson, United States..................74 Tiger Woods, United States ....................77 Tennis WTA ST. PETERSBURG LADIES TROPHY RESULTS Thursday At Sibur Arena St. Petersburg, Russia Purse: $776,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Second Round Roberta Vinci (6), Italy, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 6-4, 6-4. Elena Vesnina (5), Russia, def. Alize Cornet, France, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Venus Williams (4), United States, 6-3, 6-1. Dominika Cibulkova (2), Slovakia, def. Donna Vekic, Croatia, 6-2, 6-2. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Orlando OFF (OFF) Toronto at Detroit 4 (210) Minnesota Indiana 7 (221) at Brooklyn at Okla. City 11/2 (2031/2) Memphis at Houston 61/2 (223) Chicago at Boston 111/2 (221) Lakers at Denver OFF (OFF) Milwaukee at Portland 41/2 (206) Dallas at Sacramento 41/2 (217) Phoenix College Basketball Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Davidson 1 Rhode Island Yale 2 at Columbia Princeton 14 at Dartmouth at Harvard 51/2 Pennsylvania at Cornell 21/2 Brown at Cn. Michigan 4 W. Michigan at Ball St 3 Buffalo NHL Friday Favorite Line Underdog at Pittsburgh -135/+125 Columbus at Carolina OFF Edmonton at New Jersey -110/+100 Calgary at Detroit -110/+100 NY Islanders Anaheim -115/+105 at Florida NFL Super Bowl — Sunday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog New England 3 (581/2) Atlanta Transactions BASEBALL National League Colorado Rockies: Agreed to terms with 1B Mark Reynolds on a minor league contract. Houston Astros: Agreed to terms with RHP Dayan Diaz on a minor league contract. St. Louis Cardinals: Agreed to terms with RHP Carlos Martinez on a five-year contract. American Association Fargo-Moorhead Redhawks: Signed RHP Dylan Mouzakes. Sioux City Explorers: Signed RHP Brad Orosey and RHP Keith Picht. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association Los Angeles Lakers: Named Magic John- son adviser to owner Jeanie Buss. Milwaukee Bucks: Acquired F-C Spencer Hawes and C Roy Hibbert from Charlotte for C Miles Plumlee. Waived F Steve Novak. San Antonio Spurs: Signed C Joel An- thony to a second 10-day contract. Women's National Basketball Association Atlanta Dream: Signed G Brianna Kiesel to a multiyear contract. Washington Mystics: Acquired F Elena Delle Donne from Chicago for C Stefanie Dolson, G-F Kahleah Copper and a 2017 first-round (No. 2) draft pick. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 2 B

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