Red Bluff Daily News

February 07, 2017

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COLLEGEMEN'SBASKETBALL LSU at Kentucky:4p.m.,ESPN. Georgetown at Villanova: 4p.m., FS1. Florida at Georgia: 4p.m., ESPN2. Tulsa at Memphis: 4p.m., ESPNU. Michigan State at Michigan: 6p.m., ESPN. Iowa State at Texas: 6p.m., ESPN2. Mississippi State at Auburn: 6p.m., ESPNU. NHL San Jose Sharks at Buffalo Sabres: 4p.m., CSN. Los Angeles Kings at Tampa Bay Lightning: 4:30p.m., NBCSN. SKIING Alpine Skiing, World Championship, Super G: 3a.m., NBCSN. TENNIS ATP Open, Sud de France, Early Round: 7a.m., TENNIS. ATP Open, Sud de France, Early Round: 10:30 a.m., TENNIS. ATP Open, Sud de France, Early Round: 5a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair Landry,BillWalsh,Jimmy Johnson. None of them have a claim to the sustained excellence of Brady and Belichick, the only duo to go to seven Super Bowls and win five. "He cast a wizard spell over us that changed every- thing," tackle Nate Solder said of Belichick and the message at halftime, when the Patriots trailed 21-3 be- fore going down 28-3 in the third quarter. Joking aside, the Patri- ots probably never pan- icked because they can lean on things such as 16 consecutive winning sea- sons (Dallas has the record with 20) and an NFL-best 34 playoff games and 25 postseason wins for Brady. "At halftime, I would say we weren't down at all," said Brady, who won his fourth Super Bowl MVP award by leading two fourth-quarter touch- down drives that included 2-point conversions to force overtime. "We were disappointed in the way we played, and we knew that we could go out and do a lot better in the sec- ond half." Brady and Belichick fall short of the nine NBA ti- tles that Bill Russell and Red Auerbach won to- gether in Boston, or the six that Michael Jordan and Phil Jackson celebrated in Chicago. There will always be arguments for the multi- ple dynasties of the New York Yankees, who have 27 World Series titles. Short- stop Derek Jeter and man- ager Joe Torre won four to- gether in a span of five sea- sons from 1996 to 2000, not to mention Mickey Mantle and Casey Stengle or Lou Gehrig and Joe McCarthy. And don't forget about the Montreal Canadiens, who won 16 NHL titles in 27 seasons from the 1950s to the 1970s. Then again, leagues were smaller and rosters were thinner back then, and the conversation was nearly about Atlanta end- ing its championship drought. "To come back and just stall and just give Tom Brady a glimpse of a chance to come back, we did that," Falcons receiver Taylor Gabriel said. "It's tough to lose like that in the Super Bowl." Instead, the spotlight is firmly back on Brady, Belichick and the Patri- ots, who might not even be done — they're already favored to repeat in 2018. Dynasty FROM PAGE 1 By John Hickey BayAreaNewsGroup The Oakland A's will name the grounds at the Oakland Coliseum "Rickey Henderson Field" as a way to honor the Hall of Famer. The dedication will take place during a pre- game ceremony on Open- ing Night, April 3, against the Angels. Henderson, who spent four different tours with the A's, has been an in- structor with the A's for the last few seasons and now will take on the role of spe- cial assistant to club presi- dent Dave Kaval. "Rickey Henderson is the greatest Athletic of all time," Kaval said in a state- ment. "It is fitting we honor and recognize his impact on our franchise by naming our playing field after him." Henderson broke in with the A's in 1979 and spent 14 of his 25-season career with the A's. "This is an incredi- ble honor and I am hum- bled that the field I have so many incredible memories on is now named after me," Henderson said. "I love this organization and our fans and look forward to con- tributing to our success for many years to come." Rickey Henderson Day will be July 25 when fans on hand for the A's and In- dians will get a white Oak- land jersey with Hender- son's name and his num- ber, 24, on the back. MLB A's to name Coliseum field a er Henderson JANE TYSKA — STAFF The A's are naming their playing field at the Coliseum a er Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson. Lynch, also in the team- issued statement, praised how "very fortunate" the 49ers are to hire Shana- han. "As an offensive mind, I think he stands alone in the National Football League, as evidenced by the explo- sive and record-setting of- fense in Atlanta," Lynch said. "Though he grew up around coaching, what has most impressed me about Kyle is that he's become his own man in the pro- fession. Our philosophies on football and our visions for leading the 49ers back to being a championship team align in every way. I am thrilled to have Kyle Shanahan on board." "As this team begins the task of reestablishing that standard, I could not ask for a better partner than John Lynch," Shana- han added. "He is a man who certainly has per- sonal knowledge of what championship organiza- tions look like. John and I look forward to establish- ing a strong culture that will serve as our founda- tion for constructing this team." Shanahan said the 49ers' next step is to fill out his coaching staff and identify players "who work hard and are dedicated to doing things the right way, always in the best inter- est of the team. Most im- portantly, we want to give our fans a team they can be proud of on and off the field." Sunday night, Shana- han faced reporters in Houston and tried to ex- plain what went wrong in Super Bowl LI. "You look at everything," Shanahan said, according to Denver's 9News.com. "Look at what happened, look at what you could have done different. Wish we could have ran more plays, but … you give the ball back to Tom Brady too much, that's usually what happens." Patriots coach Bill Belichick said at Mon- day's press conference: "We think Kyle did a tre- mendous job with that offense all year and cer- tainly last night, right from the first play with the toss-crack and the play-ac- tion passes. That's a good, very-well coached foot- ball team with some very skilled players." 49ers FROM PAGE 1 By Daniel Brown Bay Area News Group OAKLAND Steve Kerr had no issue Monday with the $25,000 fine the NBA lev- ied against him for his ver- bal abuse of referee Bill Spooner. But the Warriors coach joked that he should have gotten more bang for his buck. Kerr said assistant coach Mike Brown was too overzealous in holding him back. "All I wanted to do was get a view of the official when I yell. Mike acts like I'm going to go and try to tackle somebody," Kerr said with a laugh. "We're going to have to work this thing out a little bit better." Kerr lost his cool in Sacramento on Saturday night, when the Warriors were on en route to a mis- take-filled 109-106 over- time loss to the Kings. Kevon Looney was called for a questionable rebounding foul and Dray- mond Green got called for a technical in the ensuing argument. Kerr delivered the grand finale by storm- ing the court with a pro- fane tirade. That got him ejected with 3:34 to play in the third quarter. Brown succeed in slow- ing Kerr's body, but there was nothing he could do about his mouth. "Yeah, I knew I was go- ing to get fined. I deserve it. I do feel bad for my words," said Kerr, who is plan- ning a personal apology to Spooner. "I don't mind the explosion. I think we're all entitled to snap once in a while. But I used inappro- priate words." The foul calls were hardly the only source of frustration for the War- riors, who will try go get back on track Wednesday against the Chicago Bulls (25-26). Against the Kings, the Warriors looked lethargic at both ends of the floor and Kevin Durant had his worst game of the season. Durant was 2 for 10 from the field, including 0 of 6 from three-point range, and didn't even take a shot over the final 10 minutes. WARRIORS Kerr fined $25,000 for ref tirade 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 Su nda y, J an . 2 9 At Orlando, Fla. AFC 20, NFC 13 SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 5 At Houston New England 34, Atlanta 28, OT Patriots 34, Falcons 28 (OT) (Sunday's game) New England 0 3 6 19 6 — 34 Atlanta 0 21 7 0 0 — 28 Second quarter Atl — Freeman 5 run (Bryant kick), 12:15. Atl — Hooper 19 pass from M.Ryan (Bry- ant kick), 8:48. Atl — Alford 82 interception return (Bry- ant kick), 2:21. NE — FG Gostkowski 41, :02. Third quarter Atl — T.Coleman 6 pass from M.Ryan (Bryant kick), 8:31. NE — White 5 pass from Brady (kick failed), 2:06. Fourth quarter NE — FG Gostkowski 33, 9:44. NE — Amendola 6 pass from Brady (White run), 5:56. NE — White 1 run (Amendola pass from Brady), :57. NE — White 2 run, 11:02. A — 70,807. NE Atl First downs 37 17 Total net yards 546 344 Rushes yds 25-104 18-104 Passing 442 240 Punt returns 4-39 1-0 Kickoff returns 1-20 5-42 Int ret 0-0 1-82 Comp-att-int 43-63-1 17-23-0 Sacked yds lost 5-24 5-44 Punts 4-41.5 6-47.0 Fumbles lost 1-1 1-1 Penalties yds 4-23 9-65 Time of poss. 40:31 23:27 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — New England, Blount 11-31, Wh it e 6 -2 9, L ew is 6 -2 7, B ra dy 1 -1 5, Edelman 1-2. Atlanta, Freeman 11-75, T.Coleman 7-29. Passing — New England, Brady 43-62-1- 466, Edelman 0-1-0-0. Atlanta, M.Ryan 17-23-0-284. Receiving — New England, White 14-110, Amendola 8-78, Mitchell 6-70, Edelman 5-87, Bennett 5-62, Hogan 4-57, Lewis 1-2. Atlanta, Ju.Jones 4-87, Gabriel 3-76, Hooper 3-32, Freeman 2-46, Sanu 2-25, DiMarco 2-12, T.Coleman 1-6. Missed field goals — None. SUPER BOWL CHAMPIONS 2017 — New England (AFC) 34, Atlanta (NFC) 28, OT 2016 — Denver (AFC) 24, Carolina (NFC) 10 2015 — New England (AFC) 28, Seattle (NFC) 24 2014 — Seattle (NFC) 43, Denver (AFC) 8 2013 — Baltimore (AFC) 34, San Fran- cisco (NFC) 31 2012 — N.Y. Giants (NFC) 21, New Eng- land (AFC) 17 2011 — Green Bay (NFC) 31, Pittsburgh (AFC) 25 2010 — New Orleans (NFC) 31, Indianapo- lis (AFC) 17 2009 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 27, Arizona (NFC) 23 2008 — N.Y. Giants (NFC) 17, New Eng- land (AFC) 14 2007 — Indianapolis (AFC) 29, Chicago (NFC) 17 2006 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 21, Seattle (NFC) 10 2005 — New England (AFC) 24, Philadel- phia (NFC) 21 2004 — New England (AFC) 32, Carolina (NFC) 29 2003 — Tampa Bay (NFC) 48, Oakland (AFC) 21 2002 — New England (AFC) 20, St. Louis (NFC) 17 2001 — Baltimore Ravens (AFC) 34, N.Y. Giants (NFC) 7 2000 — St. Louis (NFC) 23, Tennessee (AFC) 16 1999 — Denver (AFC) 34, Atlanta (NFC) 19 1998 — Denver (AFC) 31, Green Bay (NFC) 24 1997 — Green Bay (NFC) 35, New England (AFC) 21 1996 — Dallas (NFC) 27, Pittsburgh (AFC) 17 1995 — San Francisco (NFC) 49, San Diego (AFC) 26 1994 — Dallas (NFC) 30, Buffalo (AFC) 13 1993 — Dallas (NFC) 52, Buffalo (AFC) 17 1992 — Washington (NFC) 37, Buffalo (AFC) 24 1991 — N.Y. Giants (NFC) 20, Buffalo (AFC) 19 1990 — San Francisco (NFC) 55, Denver (AFC) 10 1989 — San Francisco (NFC) 20, Cincin- nati (AFC) 16 1988 — Washington (NFC) 42, Denver (AFC) 10 1987 — N.Y. Giants (NFC) 39, Denver (AFC) 20 1986 — Chicago (NFC) 46, New England (AFC) 10 1985 — San Francisco (NFC) 38, Miami (AFC) 16 1984 — L.A. Raiders (AFC) 38, Washing- ton (NFC) 9 1983 — Washington (NFC) 27, Miami (AFC) 17 1982 — San Francisco (NFC) 26, Cincin- nati (AFC) 21 1981 — Oakland (AFC) 27, Philadelphia (NFC) 10 1980 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 31, L.A. Rams (NFC) 19 1979 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 35, Dallas (NFC) 31 1978 — Dallas (NFC) 27, Denver (AFC) 10 1977 — Oakland (AFC) 32, Minnesota (NFC) 14 1976 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 21, Dallas (NFC) 17 1975 — Pittsburgh (AFC) 16, Minnesota (NFC) 6 1974 — Miami (AFC) 24, Minnesota (NFC) 7 1973 — Miami (AFC) 14, Washington (NFC) 7 1972 — Dallas (NFC) 24, Miami (AFC) 3 1971 — Baltimore Colts (AFC) 16, Dallas (NFC) 13 1970 — Kansas City (AFL) 23, Minnesota (NFL) 7 1969 — N.Y. Jets (AFL) 16, Baltimore Colts (NFL) 7 1968 — Green Bay (NFL) 33, Oakland (AFL) 14 1967 — Green Bay (NFL) 35, Kansas City (AFL) 10 NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 43 8 .843 — Clippers 31 21 .596 121/2 Sacramento 20 31 .392 23 Lakers 18 36 .333 261/2 Phoenix 16 36 .308 271/2 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 39 11 .780 — Houston 37 17 .685 4 Memphis 31 22 .585 91/2 Dallas 20 31 .392 191/2 New Orleans 20 32 .385 20 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Utah 33 19 .635 — Oklahoma City 30 23 .566 31/2 Denver 23 28 .451 91/2 Portland 22 30 .423 11 Minnesota 19 33 .365 14 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 33 18 .647 — Toronto 32 21 .604 2 New York 22 31 .415 12 Philadelphia 18 33 .353 15 Brooklyn 9 42 .176 24 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 30 21 .588 — Atlanta 30 22 .577 1/2 Charlotte 23 28 .451 7 Miami 22 30 .423 81/2 Orlando 20 33 .377 11 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 35 15 .700 — Indiana 29 22 .569 61/2 Chicago 25 26 .490 101/2 Detroit 24 28 .462 12 Milwaukee 22 28 .440 13 Sunday's games Toronto 103, Brooklyn 95 Boston 107, Clippers 102 Oklahoma City 105, Portland 99 Monday's games Cleveland 140, Washington 135, OT Indiana 93, Oklahoma City 90 Lakers 121, New York 107 Detroit 113, Philadelphia 96 Toronto 118, Clippers 109 Utah 120, Atlanta 95 Miami 115, Minnesota 113 New Orleans 111, Phoenix 106 Denver 110, Dallas 87 San Antonio at Memphis, n Chicago at Sacramento, n Tuesday's games Brooklyn at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Orlando at Houston, 5 p.m. Portland at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday's games Cleveland at Indiana, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Denver at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Lakers at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Clippers at New York, 5 p.m. Miami at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Phoenix at Memphis, 5 p.m. Toronto at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Utah at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Boston at Sacramento, 7:30 p.m. Chicago at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Thursday's games Houston at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Orlando, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Utah at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Boston at Portland, 7:30 p.m. LEADERS Through FEBRUARY 5 SCORING G FG FT Pts Avg Westbrook, OKC 52 522 457 1613 31.0 Thomas, BOS 47 440 373 1403 29.9 Harden, HOU 54 450 495 1562 28.9 Cousins, SAC 50 468 384 1407 28.1 Davis, NOR 47 478 329 1307 27.8 DeRozan, TOR 45 448 338 1250 27.8 Lillard, POR 47 398 306 1220 26.0 James, CLE 46 441 229 1187 25.8 Durant, GOL 51 466 287 1316 25.8 Curry, GOL 50 428 213 1279 25.6 Leonard, SAN 46 385 303 1165 25.3 Butler, CHI 48 364 394 1179 24.6 Irving, CLE 43 386 166 1040 24.2 McCollum, POR 52 454 176 1215 23.4 Akounmpo, MIL 49 416 270 1137 23.2 Towns, MIN 51 457 205 1179 23.1 Lowry, TOR 51 370 269 1173 23.0 Wall, WAS 48 406 238 1103 23.0 Anthony, NYK 51 421 221 1166 22.9 Walker, CHA 50 405 193 1141 22.8 College basketball AP TOP 25 MEN'S FARED 1. Gonzaga (24-0) did not play. 2. Villanova (22-2) did not play. 3. Kansas (21-3) beat Kansas State 74-71. 4. Louisville (19-5) lost to No. 12 Virginia 71-55. 5. Oregon (21-3) did not play. 6. Baylor (20-3) did not play. 7. Wisconsin (20-3) did not play. 8. North Carolina (21-4) did not play. 9. Arizona (21-3) did not play. 10. UCLA (21-3) did not play. 11. Cincinnati (21-2) did not play. 12. Virginia (18-5) beat No. 4 Louisville 71-55. 13. West Virginia (18-5) did not play. 14. Florida State (20-4) did not play. 15. Kentucky (18-5) did not play. 16. Purdue (19-5) did not play. 17. Florida (18-5) did not play. 18. Duke (18-5) did not play. 19. South Carolina (19-4) did not play. 20. Saint Mary's (21-2) did not play. 21. Maryland (20-3) did not play. 22. Butler (18-5) did not play. 23. Creighton (20-4) did not play. 24. Xavier (17-6) did not play. 25. SMU (20-4) did not play. AP TOP 25 WOMEN'S FARED 1. UConn (22-0) did not play. 2. Baylor (23-2) lost to No. 11 Texas 85-79. 3. Maryland (23-1) did not play. 4. Mississippi State (23-1) did not play. 5. Florida State (22-2) beat No. 16 Miami 80-71. 6. South Carolina (20-2) did not play. 7. Notre Dame (22-3) beat No. 12 Louis- ville 85-66. 8. Stanford (20-4) lost to No. 15 UCLA 85-76. 9. Oregon State (22-2) did not play. 10. Washington (22-3) did not play. 11. Texas (19-4) beat No. 2 Baylor 85-79. 12. Louisville (20-6) lost to No. 7 Notre Dame 85-66. 13. Ohio State (21-5) did not play. 14. Duke (20-4) did not play. 15. UCLA (18-5) beat No. 8 Stanford 85-76. 16. Miami (17-6) lost to No. 5 Florida State 80-71. 17. N.C. State (17-6) did not play. 18. DePaul (20-5) did not play. 19. Oklahoma (18-6) did not play. 20. Syracuse (17-7) did not play. 21. Michigan (19-5) did not play. 22. South Florida (18-4) did not play. 23. Arizona State (15-8) did not play. 24. Tennessee (15-8) did not play. 25. Kansas State (17-7) did not play. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 53 33 17 3 69 144 121 Anaheim 54 28 16 10 66 141 135 Edmonton 55 29 18 8 66 156 141 Los Angeles 53 27 22 4 58 132 128 Calgary 55 27 25 3 57 146 157 Vancouver 52 23 23 6 52 123 150 Arizona 51 17 28 6 40 116 161 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 51 34 12 5 73 172 119 Chicago 54 32 17 5 69 152 141 Nashville 52 25 19 8 58 142 135 St. Louis 53 26 22 5 57 149 162 Winnipeg 55 25 26 4 54 161 172 Dallas 53 21 22 10 52 147 169 Colorado 49 14 33 2 30 99 168 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 54 30 16 8 68 158 134 Ottawa 50 27 17 6 60 137 135 To ro nt o 51 2 4 17 1 0 58 1 60 1 55 Boston 55 26 23 6 58 143 149 Florida 52 23 19 10 56 124 143 Detroit 52 22 21 9 53 132 152 Buffalo 52 21 21 10 52 126 145 Tampa Bay 53 23 24 6 52 144 157 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 53 36 11 6 78 175 114 Pittsburgh 51 33 13 5 71 184 147 Columbus 51 33 13 5 71 170 127 N.Y. Rangers 52 33 18 1 67 177 139 Philadelphia 54 26 21 7 59 144 164 N.Y. Islanders 51 23 18 10 56 153 153 New Jersey 54 23 21 10 56 127 153 Carolina 51 24 20 7 55 138 146 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday's games Washington 5, Los Angeles 0 Edmonton 1, Montreal 0, SO N.Y. Rangers 4, Calgary 3 Monday's games St. Louis 2, Philadelphia 0 N.Y. Islanders 6, Toronto 5, OT New Jersey 2, Buffalo 1 Tuesday's games San Jose at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Anaheim at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Carolina at Washington, 4 p.m. Calgary at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Los Angeles at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Columbus at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. St. Louis at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Vancouver at Nashville, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Montreal at Colorado, 6 p.m. Wednesday's games Chicago at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Thursday's games San Jose at Boston, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Nashville at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Detroit at Washington, 4 p.m. Vancouver at Columbus, 4 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. St. Louis at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Colorado, 6 p.m. Montreal at Arizona, 6 p.m. LEADERS Through FEBRUARY 5 GP G A Pts Connor McDavid, EDM 55 18 42 60 Sidney Crosby, PIT 45 30 29 59 Brad Marchand, BOS 55 23 32 55 Brent Burns, SJ 53 22 33 55 Evgeni Malkin, PIT 47 22 32 54 Mark Scheifele, WPG 52 25 28 53 Nick Backstrom, WAS 53 15 38 53 Patrick Kane, CHI 54 17 35 52 Vlad Tarasenko, STL 52 23 27 50 Tyler Seguin, DAL 53 19 31 50 Phil Kessel, PIT 51 17 33 50 Alex Ovechkin, WAS 53 25 23 48 Mikael Granlund, MIN 51 15 33 48 6 tied with 47 pts. Tennis DAVIS CUP RESULTS WORLD GROUP First Round Winners to quarterfinals, April 7-9 losers to WG playoffs, Sept. 15-17 United States 5, Switzerland 0 At Legacy Arena/BJCC Birmingham, Ala. Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Jack Sock, United States, def. Marco Chiudinelli, Switzerland, 6-4, 6-3, 6-1. John Isner, United States, def. Henri Laaksonen, Switzerland, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (1). Doubles Jack Sock and Steve Johnson, United States, def. Antoine Bellier and Adrien Bossel, Switzerland, 7-6 (3), 6-3, 7-6 (5). Reverse Singles Sam Querrey, United States, def. Adrien Bossel, Switzerland, 6-3, 7-5. Steve Johnson, United States, def. An- toine Bellier, Switzerland, 6-4, 6-3. Golf PHOENIX OPEN PAR Sunday At TPC Scottsdale Scottsdale, Ariz. Purse: $6.7 million Yardage: 7,266; Par 71 Final (x-won on fourth playoff hole) $1,206,000 x-Hideki Matsuyama 65-68-68-66—267 -17 $723,600 Webb Simpson...........67-71-65-64—267 -17 $455,600 Louis Oosthuizen .....68-67-68-65—268 -16 $294,800 Rickie Fowler ............67-68-69-65—269 -15 $294,800 J.J. Spaun................... 71-64-67-67—269 -15 $241,200 Byeong Hun An.........66-66-65-73—270 -14 $216,075 Daniel Berger............71-66-66-68—271 -13 $216,075 Martin Laird.............. 67-66-65-73—271 -13 OMEGA DUBAI DESERT CLASSIC Sunday At Emirates Golf Club Dubai, United Arab Emirates Purse: $2.65 million Yardage: 7,328; Par: 72 Final Sergio Garcia, Spain......65-67-68-69—269 Henrik Stenson, Sweden...68-68-67-69—272 Tyrrell Hatton, England..72-70-65-67—274 Lasse Jensen, Denmark.69-70-70-65—274 Matthew Fitzpatrick, England.................... 69-72-68-67—276 Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Tuesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Charlotte 101/2 (217) Brooklyn at Houston 11 (223) Orlando at Dallas 1 (2041/2) Portland NHL Tuesday Favorite Line Underdog at NY Rangers -140/+130 Anaheim at Washington -200/+180 Carolina at Pittsburgh -220/+200 Calgary San Jose -140/+130 at Buffalo at Ottawa -137/+127 St. Louis Columbus -136/+126 at Detroit at Tampa Bay -120/+110 Los Angeles at Toronto OFF Dallas Minnesota -119/+109 at Winnipeg at Nashville -194/+179 Vancouver Montreal -180/+165 at Colorado Transactions BASEBALL American League Cleveland Indians: Agreed to terms with OF Wily Mo Pena on a minor league contract. Kansas City Royals: Agreed to terms with RHP Jason Hammel on a two-year contract. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2017 2 B

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