Red Bluff Daily News

April 21, 2017

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They'llthenspendafull month away from the Col- iseum when they travel to face the Buffalo Bills on Oct. 29 before the Sunday night game the next week against the Dolphins. The team is expected to stay back east between games, likely practicing again at IMG Academy in Braden- ton, Fla. That's where they worked out last year in be- tween road wins at Jack- sonville and Tampa Bay and is about 3 ½ hours from Miami. The Raiders have their bye on Nov. 12, which for the second straight year will precede their trip to Mexico City. Instead of a Monday night game, this year's title at Estadio Az- teca with the defending Su- per Bowl champion New England Patriots will be a 1:25 p.m. PT Sunday kick- off on Nov. 19. Consecutive home games follow against the Broncos (Nov. 26) and New York Giants (Dec. 3) before the Raiders close the year with three of four on the road. That tough stretch starts Dec. 10 at Kansas City, includes the prime time games against Dallas and Philadelphia — their first Christmas Day game since 2004 — and the reg- ular season concludes with the Raiders returning to the Los Angeles area for the first time since 1994. They face the Chargers on New Years Eve at 1:25 p.m. at the StubHub Center in Carson. RAIDERSEXERCISEOPTION ON MACK The Raiders have exercised the fifth- year contract option on Khalil Mack, ensuring the reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year remains with the team through at least 2018, the team an- nounced. Mack, the No. 5 overall pick in 2014 and reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year, would receive the average of the top 10 play- ers at his position in 2018 if the Raiders don't first put pen to paper on a long- term contract extension. Raiders general man- ager Reggie McKenzie has made that his stated goal for this offseason, al- though the higher priority at this point would be to lock up quarterback Derek Carr and right guard Gabe Jackson — the team's sec- ond and third round picks from 2014 who are enter- ing the final year of their deals. After they are locked up, Mack becomes the big- gest priority and could land himself a contract in excess of $20 million per year, although it's possible that waits until next off- season. Based on the current top defensive end salaries, Mack would be due about $13.2 million in 2018. His cap number for this season is a reasonable $5.9 million and the Raiders have about $28 million in cap space to fit in those extensions, plus a possible deal with retired running back Marshawn Lynch. The plan with Carr, whom the team has al- ready engaged in contract talks with, is to wait un- til after next week's draft and then return to the ta- ble with the hopes of hav- ing him locked up before the start of training camp. 49ers Another coach, another home opener. Kyle Shana- han's debut as 49ers coach reportedly will come at Levi's Stadium, just not on the same "Monday Night Football" stage his prede- cessors enjoyed the previ- ous two seasons. The 49ers will open by hosting the Carolina Pan- thers on Sunday, Sept. 10. The 49ers' last two seasons began with "Monday Night Football" routs, home vic- tories over Minnesota (20- 3) and the Los Angeles Rams (28-0) that inspired false hope of a turnaround under coaches Jim Tom- sula and Chip Kelly. What happens after Week 1 for Shanahan's crew is a travel-heavy schedule the first half of the season, including three consecu- tive road games: at the Ar- izona Cardinals, Indianap- olis Colts and Washington. Before that stretch, the 49ers' first road game will come in Week 2 at division rival Seattle. That trek is not as logistically challeng- ing as the Week 2 games encountered by Tomsula and Kelly. Those coaches followed each opener with an East Coast trip against a team coming off 10 days of rest; the 49ers lost 43-18 at Pittsburgh in 2015 and 46-27 at Carolina last year. In 2013, the 49ers vis- ited Seattle in Week 2, losing 29-3 after open- ing their last playoff sea- son with a home win over Green Bay. After facing the Se- ahawks, the 49ers return home for a quick turn- around and their only prime-time game, against the Rams on Thursday night, Sept. 21. Then comes a three-game, three-city spree last forced upon the franchise in 2005, when they played December road games at Seattle, Jackson- ville and St. Louis. NFL FROM PAGE 1 Kerr and the Warriors never could have imagined it would evolve into this kind of productive center rotation at season's outset. The pieces were there, but there were so many ques- tions about how they would produce individually, let alone whether they would fit together and play off one another. "It took a couple of months," Kerr said. "I didn't play JaVale at all for the first 10 games or so. But his importance became ob- vious with that burst he gave us. Then David got comfortable with that sec- ond unit, and it all started making sense." The Warriors' coach un- derstands from his play- ing days the value of hav- ing multiple serviceable centers who fit into de- fined roles. He played on Chicago Bulls teams that rotated a slew of big men such as Bill Cartwright, Luc Longley, Will Perdue, Stacey King and Bill Wen- nington over the course of a decade. None were stars, but they combined to earn 15 NBA champion- ship rings playing along- side Michael Jordan, Scot- tie Pippen, Horace Grant and Dennis Rodman. Per- due added another — play- ing with Kerr — with the San Antonio Spurs in 1999. Kerr said those Bulls bigs definitely were im- portant to Chicago's suc- cess, but that they're very tough to compare with his current group. "Those guys were all big monsters," he said. "This is different. Our guys now are really dynamically differ- ent from one another. The centers with the Bulls were actually all pretty similar players. But we needed them all. Back then, you had to guard Hakeem Ola- juwon and Patrick Ew- ing and Rik Smits and Shaquille O'Neal. So we needed their fouls." Warriors FROM PAGE 1 AUTORACING NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series, Food City 500, Practice:8:30a.m.,FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Fitzgerald Glider Kits 300, Practice: 10a.m., FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Fitzgerald Glider Kits 300, Final Practice: 12:30p.m., FS1. NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series, Food City 500, Qualifying: 1:30p.m., FS1. NHRA Drag Racing, Spring Nationals, Qualify- ing: 5:30p.m., FS1. NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series, Food City 500Practice: 5:30a.m., FS1. COLLEGE BASEBALL Vanderbilt at Georgia: 4p.m. ESPNU. MLB BASEBALL Washington Nationals vs. New York Mets or Chicago Cubs vs. Cincinnati Reds: 4p.m., MLB. San Francisco Giants at Colorado Rockies: 5:30p.m., NBCS-BA. Seattle Mariners at Oakland Athletics: 7p.m., NBCS-CA. NBA PLAYOFFS Boston Celtics at Chicago Bulls, Eastern Con- ference Quarterfinal, Game 3: 4p.m., ESPN. Houston Rockets at Oklahoma City Thunder, Western Conference Quarterfinal, Game 3: 6:30p.m., ESPN. Los Angeles Clippers at Utah Jazz, Western Conference Quarterfinal, Game 3: 7p.m., ESPN2. GOLF Champions Tour, Legends of Golf, Round 1: 9 a.m., GOLF. PGA Tour, Texas Open, Round 2: 12:30p.m., GOLF. NHL HOCKEY Stanley Cup Playoffs, Toronto Maple Leafs at Washington Capitals: 4p.m., NBCSN. Stanley Cup Playoffs, Boston Bruins at Ot- toaw Senators: 4:30p.m., USA. COLLEGE SOFTBALL Stanford vs. Oregon State: 3p.m., PAC12BA. California vs. UCLA: 7p.m., PAC12BA. TENNIS ATP Monte Carlo Masters, Semifinal: 4:30 a.m., TENNIS. On the air Corning (5-6-1, 2-2 WSL) out-hit Paradise (8-4-1, 5-0), 4-1 and put together rallies with runners on base in each of the last two innings. In the sixth, Wun- sch reached second, but was stranded there with the help of the first of two Paradise double plays. Sec- ond baseman Ryan Farrell ignited the first one as he fielded it and flipped it to shortstop James Erisman to help the Bobcats get out of the inning in front, 2-1. Then in the top of the sev- enth, Erisman did most of it by himself, securing a grounder up the middle, then touching second be- fore completing the dou- ble play with an on-target throw to first. "Perfect timing, I needed a play like that," Cleary said. "Couldn't have come at a better time." Cleary essentially owned the rest of the day, finishing off the victory with a called strike three on pinch-hitter Travis Reid for the last of his 10 strikeouts. The vet- eran right-hander and Par- adise's ace all season had a perfect game through three andtwooutsintothefourth inning, before Bryce Arm- strong delivered a liner up the middle for Corning's first hit. The Cardinals would reach in each of the remaining innings but only plate one run when Arm- strong went opposite field through the hole at short to drive home Tyler Grine and cut the deficit to 2-1. Noah Miller had the last of the Corning base hits, but was later forced out at second by Erisman. Tomlinson said Miller will start Friday's series finale against Erisman in Corning. "Noah is a guy who's done pretty well with a low ERA," Tomlinson said. "He's not a dominant guy either, but throws pitches for strikes and does a good job for us." Paradise's bats will try to have more success against Miller. Believe it or not, two hits would ac- complish that. After a two- run first inning, in which both scores were helped by a couple errors and a Corn- ing wild pitch, Paradise would only reach two more times, the first on a single from Farrell and the sec- ond a walk to Ryan Bran- son. At one point, Wunsch retired 12 of 13 batters to get Corning through its half of the fifth trailing 2-0. Paradise would not reach second base after the first inning. "He did a really great job missing bats, we put balls in play but no one could re- ally square any thing up," said Cleary, who went 0 for 2 with a walk and run scored. Baseball FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Colorado 10 6 .625 _ Arizona 10 7 .588 1/2 Los Angeles 8 8 .500 2 San Diego 7 10 .412 31/2 Giants 6 10 .375 4 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cincinnati 9 7 .563 _ Chicago 8 7 .533 1/2 Milwaukee 9 8 .529 1/2 Pittsburgh 6 9 .400 21/2 St. Louis 6 10 .375 3 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 10 5 .667 _ Miami 8 7 .533 2 New York 8 8 .500 21/2 Philadelphia 6 9 .400 4 Atlanta 6 9 .400 4 Wednesday's games St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1 Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 4 Seattle 10, Miami 5 Baltimore 2, Cincinnati 0 N.Y. Mets 5, Philadelphia 4 Washington 14, Atlanta 4 Kansas City 2, Giants 0 L.A. Dodgers 4, Colorado 2 San Diego 1, Arizona 0 Thursday's games Baltimore 2, Cincinnati 1, 10 innings Philadelphia 6, N.Y. Mets 4 Washington 3, Atlanta 2 Milwaukee 7, St. Louis 5 San Diego 4, Arizona 1 Friday's games Atlanta (Colon 1-1) at Philadelphia (Hellickson 2-0), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 2-0) at Pitts- burgh (Glasnow 0-1), 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 0-0) at Cincinnati (Adleman 0-0), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 0-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 0-3) at Milwaukee (Peralta 3-0), 5:10 p.m. Giants (Cueto 3-0) at Colorado (Chat- wood 1-2), 5:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Wood 1-0) at Arizona (Walker 2-1), 6:40 p.m. Miami (Conley 1-1) at San Diego (Cahill 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Royals 2, Giants 0 (Wednesday's game) San Fran Kansas City AB R H B AB R H B A.Hill lf 3 0 0 0 A.Grdon lf 4 0 1 0 Belt 1b 4 0 1 0 Mstakas 3b4 0 2 1 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0 Posey dh 4 0 1 0 Hosmer 1b 4 1 1 0 Crwford ss 3 0 1 0 S.Perez c 3 0 2 1 E.Nunz 3b 3 0 0 0 Mrrfeld 2b 4 0 0 0 Hundley c 3 0 1 0 A.Escbr ss 3 0 1 0 Pa ni k 2 b 3 0 0 0 Ct hb er t d h 3 0 0 0 G.Hrnan cf 2 0 0 0 Orlando rf 3 1 2 0 Span ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 4 0 32 2 10 2 San Fran 000 000 000 — 0 Kansas City 000 010 01x — 2 DP: San Francisco 1, Kansas City 1; LOB: San Francisco 4, Kansas City 7; 2B: Hundley (6), L.Cain (3), Hosmer (1), A.Escobar (3); SB: L.Cain (5), Orlando (1); CS: Orlando (1). IP H R ER BB SO San Fran Bgarner L,0-3 6 7 1 1 1 4 Okert 1 1 0 0 0 1 Kontos 1 2 1 1 0 1 Kansas City Va rg as W ,3 -0 7 4 0 0 0 9 Soria 1 0 0 0 0 1 Herrera S,3-4 1 0 0 0 1 0 WP: Herrera; T: 2:28; A: 24,402 (37,903); NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS Batting Freeman, Atlanta, .440; Thames, Mil- waukee, .408; Cozart, Cincinnati, .405; Harper, Washington, .404; Zimmerman, Washington, .380; Turner, Los Angeles, .360; Myers, San Diego, .359; Arenado, Colorado, .356; Realmuto, Miami, .354; Suarez, Cincinnati, .354; 1 tied at .344. Runs Thames, Milwaukee, 18; Yelich, Miami, 17; Harper, Washington, 16; Eaton, Washington, 14; Freeman, Atlanta, 13; Hernandez, Philadelphia, 13; Braun, Milwaukee, 12; Cespedes, New York, 12; Lamb, Arizona, 12; 4 tied at 11. RBI Ozuna, Miami, 19; Harper, Washington, 18; Bruce, New York, 14; Lamb, Arizona, 14; Shaw, Milwaukee, 13. Home runs Thames, Milwaukee, 7; Arenado, Colo- rado, 6; Bruce, New York, 6; Cespedes, New York, 6; Freeman, Atlanta, 6; Harper, Washington, 6. Stolen bases Hamilton, Cincinnati, 7; Peraza, Cincinnati, 6; Nunez, San Francisco, 5; Braun, Milwau- kee, 4; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 4; Owings, Arizona, 4; Phillips, Atlanta, 4; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 4; Villar, Milwaukee, 4. Pitching Cueto, San Francisco, 3-0; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 3-1; Peralta, Milwaukee, 3-0; Robles, New York, 3-0; 21 tied at 2-0. AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 11 5 .688 _ A's 7 8 .467 31/2 Seattle 7 9 .438 4 Los Angeles 7 10 .412 41/2 Texas 6 10 .375 5 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 8 7 .533 _ Detroit 8 7 .533 _ Chicago 7 7 .500 1/2 Ka ns as C it y 7 8 .4 67 1 Minnesota 7 8 .467 1 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Baltimore 10 4 .714 _ New York 10 5 .667 1/2 Boston 10 6 .625 1 Tampa Bay 9 8 .529 21/2 Toronto 3 12 .200 71/2 Wednesday's games A's 9, Texas 1 Seattle 10, Miami 5 N.Y. Yankees 9, Chicago White Sox 1 Toronto 3, Boston 0 Baltimore 2, Cincinnati 0 Tampa Bay 8, Detroit 7 Cleveland at Minnesota, ppd. Houston 5, L.A. Angels 1 Kansas City 2, Giants 0 Thursday's games Boston 4, Toronto 1, 10 innings Cleveland 6, Minnesota 2 Tampa Bay 8, Detroit 1 Houston 2, L.A. Angels 1 Baltimore 2, Cincinnati 1, 10 innings Texas 1, Kansas City 0, 13 innings Seattle at A's, n. Friday's games Boston (Pomeranz 1-0) at Baltimore (Asher 0-0), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 2-0) at Pitts- burgh (Glasnow 0-1), 4:05 p.m. Houston (Fiers 0-1) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Karns 0-0) at Texas (Hamels 0-0), 5:05 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 1-1) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 0-3), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 1-1) at Minnesota (Santiago 1-1), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 0-1) at A's (Manaea 0-1), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (Latos 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Meyer 0-0), 7:07 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS Batting Garcia, Chicago, .423; Headley, New York, .396; Castro, New York, .368; Ramirez, Cleveland, .365; Lindor, Cleveland, .351; Souza Jr., Tampa Bay, .349; Cain, Kansas City, .347; Moreland, Boston, .344; Reddick, Houston, .341; Betts, Boston, .340; 1 tied at .339. Runs Haniger, Seattle, 15; Headley, New York, 14; Davis, Oakland, 13; Kiermaier, Tampa Bay, 13; Lindor, Cleveland, 13; Mazara, Texas, 12; Sano, Minnesota, 12; Springer, Houston, 12; 4 tied at 11. RBI Mazara, Texas, 17; Haniger, Seattle, 15; Ramirez, Cleveland, 15; Souza Jr., Tampa Bay, 15; Garcia, Chicago, 13; Sano, Min- nesota, 13; Espinosa, Los Angeles, 12; Judge, New York, 12; Springer, Houston, 12; 8 tied at 11. Home runs Davis, Oakland, 7; Springer, Houston, 7; Judge, New York, 5; Moustakas, Kansas City, 5; Perez, Kansas City, 5; 7 tied at 4. Stolen bases Altuve, Houston, 6; Cain, Kansas City, 5; Dozier, Minnesota, 5; Gardner, New York, 5; Mondesi, Kansas City, 5; 6 tied at 4. Pitching Keuchel, Houston, 3-0; Santana, Minne- sota, 3-0; Triggs, Oakland, 3-0; Vargas, Kansas City, 3-0; 20 tied at 2-0. NBA FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, April 15 Cleveland 109, Indiana 108 Milwaukee 97, Toronto 83 San Antonio 111, Memphis 82 Utah 97, L.A. Clippers 95 Sunday, April 16 Washington 114, Atlanta 107 Golden State 121, Portland 109 Chicago 106, Boston 102 Houston 118, Oklahoma City 87 Monday, April 17 Cleveland 117, Indiana 111 San Antonio 96, Memphis 82, San Anto- nio leads series 2-0 Tuesday, April 18 Toronto 106, Milwaukee 100, series tied 1-1 Chicago 111, Boston 97, Chicago leads series 2-0 L.A. Clippers 99, Utah 91, series tied 1-1 Wednesday, April 19 Washington 109, Atlanta 101, Washing- ton leads series 2-0 Houston 115, Oklahoma City 111, Hous- ton leads series 2-0 Golden State 110, Portland 81, Golden State leads series 2-0 Thursday, April 20 Cleveland 119, Indiana 114, Cleveland leads series 3-0 Milwaukee 104, Toronto 77, Milwaukee leads series 2-1 San Antonio at Memphis (n) Friday, April 21 Boston at Chicago, 4 p.m. Houston at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Utah, 7 p.m. Saturday, April 22 Toronto at Milwaukee, noon Washington at Atlanta, 2:30 p.m. San Antonio at Memphis, 5 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 23 Cleveland at Indiana, 10 a.m. Houston at Oklahoma City, 12:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 3:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Utah, 6 p.m. Monday, April 24 Milwaukee at Toronto, 4 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 25 x-Indiana at Cleveland, TBA x-Memphis at San Antonio, TBA x-Oklahoma City at Houston, TBA Utah at L.A. Clippers, TBA Wednesday, April 26 x-Chicago at Boston, TBA x-Atlanta at Washington, TBA x-Portland at Golden State, TBA Thursday, April 27 x-Toronto at Milwaukee, TBA x-Cleveland at Indiana, TBA x-San Antonio at Memphis, TBA x-Houston at Oklahoma City, TBA Friday, April 28 x-Boston at Chicago, TBA x-Washington at Atlanta, TBA x-Golden State at Portland, TBA x-L.A. Clippers at Utah, TBA Saturday, April 29 x-Milwaukee at Toronto, TBA x-Indiana at Cleveland, TBA x-Memphis at San Antonio, TBA x-Oklahoma City at Houston, TBA Sunday, April 30 x-Chicago at Boston, TBA x-Atlanta at Washington, TBA x-Portland at Golden State, TBA x-Utah at L.A. Clippers, TBA Warriors 110, Blazers 81 (Wednesday's game) TRAIL BLAZERS (81) Harkless 5-14 4-4 15, Vonleh 1-3 1-3 3, Lil- lard 5-17 2-2 12, Turner 2-7 0-0 5, McCol- lum 4-17 2-2 11, Aminu 4-7 0-2 9, Layman 1-1 1-2 3, Leonard 1-3 0-0 2, Napier 3-6 2-2 10, Quarterman 1-1 0-0 3, Connaughton 0-4 2-2 2, Crabbe 3-10 0-0 6. Totals 30-90 14-19 81. WARRIORS (110) Green 1-5 3-4 6, Pachulia 5-8 0-0 10, Curry 6-18 3-5 19, Thompson 6-17 1-1 16, McCaw 3-8 2-2 9, McAdoo 2-5 2-2 7, West 3-5 2-2 8, McGee 7-7 1-1 15, Jones 0-0 1-2 1, Iguodala 3-7 0-0 6, Clark 4-11 5-5 13. Totals 40-91 20-24 110. Portland 17 29 12 23 — 81 Golden State 33 22 28 27 — 110 3-Point Goals: Portland 7-34 (Napier 2-4, Quarterman 1-1, McCollum 1-3, Aminu 1-3, Turner 1-4, Harkless 1-5, Leonard 0-2, Connaughton 0-3, Lillard 0-4, Crabbe 0-5), Golden State 10-32 (Curry 4-12, Thompson 3-8, McAdoo 1-2, Green 1-3, McCaw 1-3, Iguodala 0-1, Pachulia 0-1, Clark 0-2); Fouled out: None; Rebounds: Portland 47 (Harkless 8), Golden State 54 (Green 12); Assists: Portland 17 (Turner 7), Golden State 31 (Green 10); Total fouls: Portland 19, Golden State 17; A: 19,596 (19,596). NHL PLAYOFFS – FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) Wednesday, April 12 N.Y. Rangers 2, Montreal 0 Boston 2, Ottawa 1 Pittsburgh 3, Columbus 1 St. Louis 2, Minnesota 1, OT San Jose 3, Edmonton 2, OT Thursday, April 13 Washington 3, Toronto 2, OT Nashville 1, Chicago 0 Anaheim 3, Calgary 2 Friday, April 14 Montreal 4, N.Y. Rangers 3, OT Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 1 St. Louis 2, Minnesota 1 Edmonton 2, San Jose 0 Saturday, April 15 Ottawa 4, Boston 3, OT Toronto 4, Washington 3, 2OT Nashville 5, Chicago 0 Anaheim 3, Calgary 2 Sunday, April 16 St. Louis 3, Minnesota 1 Pittsburgh 5, Columbus 4, OT Montreal 3, New York 1 Edmonton 1, San Jose 0 Monday, April 17 Toronto 4, Washington 3, OT Ottawa 4, Boston 3, OT Nashville 3, Chicago 2, OT, Nashville leads series 3-0 Anaheim 5, Calgary 4, OT Tuesday, April 18 N.Y. Rangers 2, Montreal 1 Columbus 5, Pittsburgh 4 San Jose 7, Edmontron 0, series tied 2-2 Wednesday, April 19 Washington 5, Toronto 4, series tied 2-2 Ottawa 1, Boston 0, Ottawa leads series 3-1 Minnesota 2, St. Louis 0, St. Louis leads series 3-1 Anaheim 3, Calgary 1, Anaheim wins series 4-0 Thursday, April 20 N.Y. Rangers 3, Montreal 2, OT, New York leads series 3-2 Pittsburgh 5, Columbus 2, Pittsburgh wins series 4-1 Nashville 4, Chicago 1, Nashville wins series 4-0 San Jose at Edmonton (n) Friday, April 21 Toronto at Washington, 4 p.m. Boston at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Saturday, April 22 St. Louis at Minnesota, noon Montreal at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m. x-Nashville at Chicago, 5 p.m. Edmonton at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 23 x-Ottawa at Boston, TBA Washington at Toronto, TBA Monday, April 24 x-N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, TBA x-Chicago at Nashville, TBA x-San Jose at Edmonton, TBA x-Minnesota at St. Louis, TBA Tuesday, April 25 x-Toronto at Washington, TBA Wednesday, April 26 x-Boston at Ottawa, TBA x-Nashville at Chicago, TBA x-St. Louis at Minnesota, TBA Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Portland 4 2 1 13 16 9 Kansas City 3 0 3 12 6 2 FC Dallas 3 0 2 11 7 3 Houston 3 2 1 10 13 11 San Jose 2 2 3 9 8 8 Salt Lake 2 3 2 8 8 9 Vancouver 2 3 1 7 8 11 Galaxy 2 4 0 6 8 10 Seattle 1 2 3 6 8 8 Minn. Utd. 1 4 2 5 12 24 Colorado 1 3 1 4 5 8 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 4 2 1 13 11 8 Orlando City 4 1 0 12 6 4 Chicago 3 1 2 11 9 7 N.Y. City FC 3 2 1 10 10 5 New York 3 3 1 10 7 9 Atlanta Utd. 2 2 2 8 14 7 New England 2 3 2 8 9 9 D.C. United 2 3 1 7 4 10 Toronto FC 1 1 4 7 7 6 Montreal 1 2 3 6 7 9 Philadelphia 0 4 2 2 5 11 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday, April 19 San Jose 0, New England 0, tie Friday, April 21 Chicago at Toronto FC, 4:30 p.m.. San Jose 0, New England 0 (Wednesday's game) San Jose 0 0 — 0 New England 0 0 — 0 First half — None. Second half — None. Goalies — San Jose, David Bingham, Andrew Tarbell New England, Cody Cropper, Brad Knighton. Yellow Cards — Godoy, San Jose, 27th Bingham, San Jose, 85th. Tennis ATP MONTE-CARLO MASTERS Thursday At The Monte-Carlo Country Club Monaco Purse: $4.54 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Third Round Albert Ramos-Vinolas (15), Spain, def. Andy Murray (1), Britain, 2-6, 6-2, 7-5. Marin Cilic (5), Croatia, def. Tomas Berdych (9), Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-6 (0). Pablo Cuevas (16), Uruguay, def. Stan Wawrinka (3), Switzerland, 6-4, 6-4. Lucas Pouille (11), France, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 3-0, retired. David Goffin (10), Belgium, def. Dominic Thiem (6), Austria, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-3. Rafael Nadal (4), Spain, def. Alexander Zverev (14), Germany, 6-1, 6-1. Diego Schwartzman, Argentina, def. Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, 6-3, 6-0. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Pablo Carreno Busta (13), Spain, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE Major League Baseball Friday NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Philadelphia -115/+105 Atlanta at New York -140/+130 Washington Chicago -163/+153 at Cincinnati at Milwaukee -105/-105 St. Louis San Francisco -110/+100 at Colorado Los Angeles -130/+120 at Arizona Miami -123/+113 at San Diego AMERICAN LEAGUE at Baltimore -115/+105 Boston at Tampa Bay -108/-102 Houston at Texas -145/+135 Kansas City Cleveland -145/+135 at Chicago Detroit -118/+108 at Minnesota at Los Angeles -130/+120 Toronto at Oakland -125/+115 Seattle INTERLEAGUE at Pittsburgh -109/-101 NY YANKEES NBA Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Chicago 11/2 (207) Boston at Okla. City 3 (224) Houston La Clippers 11/2 (197) at UTAH Saturday at Milwaukee OFF (OFF) Toronto at Atlanta 3 (2091/2) Washington at Memphis OFF (OFF) San Antonio Golden State 6 (217) at Portland NHL Friday Favorite Line Underdog Boston -108/-102 at Ottawa at Washington -202/+182 Toronto Transactions BASEBALL American League Detroit Tigers: Optioned RHP Warwick Saupold to Toledo (IL). Houston Astros: Placed RHP Jandel Gustave on the 10-day Dl, retroactive to Wednesday. Recalled RHP James Hoyt from Fresno (PCL). Oakland Athletics: Optioned C Bruce Maxwell to Nashville (PCL). Selected the contract of RHP Cesar Valdez from Nashville. Transferred SS Marcus Semien to the 60-day DL. Texas Rangers: Designated RHP Mike Hauschild for assignment. Selected the contract of RHP Anthony Bass from Round Rock (PCL). National League Atlanta Braves: Optioned RHP Luke Jackson and 2B Johan Camargo to Gwin- nett (IL). Reinstated OF Matt Kemp from the 10-day DL. Recalled RHP Aaron Blair from Gwinnett. Cincinnati Reds: Agreed to terms with RHP Asher Wojciechowski on a minor league contract. New York Mets: Optioned RHP Rafael Montero and LHP Sean Gilmartin to Las Vegas (PCL). Reinstated RHP Jeurys Familia from the restricted list. Recalled C Kevin Plawecki from Las Vegas. Trans- ferred 3B David Wright to the 60-day DL. St. Louis Cardinals: Placed INF Jhonny Peralta on the 10-day Dl, retroactive to Sunday. Reinstated LHP Tyler Lyons from the 10-day DL. San Francisco Giants: Sent OF Mac Williamson to San Jose (Cal) for a rehab assignment. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 2017 2 B

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