Red Bluff Daily News

May 16, 2014

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COLLEGEBASEBALL Mississippi at Texas A&M:5 p.m., ESPNU. MLB BASEBALL Oakland Athletics at Cleve- land Indians: 4p.m., CSN. Miami Marlins at San Fran- cisco Giants: 7p.m., (21, 31). CYCLING Tour of California, Stage 6: 2 p.m., NBCSP. BOXING Junior middleweights, Delvin Rodriguez vs. Joachim Alcine: 6p.m., ESPN2. GOLF European PGA Tour, Open de Espana, Second Round: 6:30 a.m., GOLF. Champions Tour, Regions Tra- dition, Second Round: 9:30 a.m., GOLF. PGA Tour, HP Byron Nel- son Championship, Second Round: noon, GOLF. HOCKEY IIHF World Championship, Group B, Kazakhstan vs. United States: 6:30a.m., NBCSP. NHL PLAYOFFS Conference Semifinals Game 7, Los Angeles Kings at Anaheim Ducks: 6p.m., NBCSP. HORSE RACING Thoroughbreds, Black-Eyed Susan Stakes: 1p.m., NBCSP. COLLEGE SOFTBALL NCAA Division I Playoffs, Regionals Game 1, South Carolina vs. South Florida: 1:30p.m., ESPN2. Game 2, Fordham at Florida State: 4p.m., ESPN2. Game 1, Louisville vs. LSU: 5 p.m., ESPN. ONTHEAIR involvinggame-speedtack- ling to 90-minute sessions twice a week, while prohib- iting such full-contact drills in the offseason. It also ap- plies to private and charter schools. Most coaches already abide by similar rules to protect student safety. "There's really not a big uproar about this because it really is nothing new for our coaches," said Brian Seymour, a senior director with the federation. Seymour's group also up- dated its bylaws earlier this month to limit total prac- tice time to 18 hours per week for high school foot- ball players. Most of the votes against the bill came from Repub- lican lawmakers and some Democrats. "Coaches, the schools, the parents are well-equipped without the state's involve- ment to determine what's best for that team, for their players," said Assembly- woman Kristin Olsen, R- Modesto. Cooley responded that his bill only limits certain types of practice and that Texas has even stricter rules. That state,thesettingforthepop- ular television drama "Fri- day Night Lights," allows just one 90-minute full-con- tact session a week. The legislation also ref- erences middle schools, al- though flag football is by far the most common form of the game played at that level in California. Cooley's bill would not apply to pri- vate youth leagues such as Pop Warner. Football FROM PAGE 1 an established relationship with Kerr was a big reason Lacob wanted him as coach. Lacob lauded Kerr as a candidate last week and defended the decision to change coaches — which has been debated at great lengths in the basketball- united Bay Area. He com- pared the decision to how he built his fortune as a ven- ture capitalist in Silicon Val- ley. Lacob said there's a dif- ferent person to lead a busi- ness at different stages of development, and the War- riors have gone from a "startup" company to an or- ganization looking to maxi- mize its output. "Or in this case win an NBA championship," he said. "And we just felt over- all we needed a different person to go forward and get to the next level." And while Kerr has no coaching experience, he played 15 seasons and — also similar to Mark Jack- son — has been around some of the most success- ful sideline leaders. Kerr has credited Phil Jackson and Tex Winter for mostofhisbasketballknowl- edge. Winter taught the tri- angle offense — which Kerr wouldnotcommittorunning withtheWarriors—andwas alongtimeassistantforJack- son, who used the system to win an NBA-record 11 cham- pionships as a coach of the Bulls and Lakers. Golden State also spoke with former Orlando Magic and Miami Heat coach Stan Van Gundy during its search.VanGundyagreedto a $35 million, five-year deal with Detroit on Tuesday af- ter the Pistons also gave him control of basketball opera- tions — something the War- riors wouldn't do with gen- eralmanagerBobMyersand Kirk Lacob in place. The Warriors met with Kerr again on Tuesday night in Oklahoma City, where Kerr was calling the Thunder-Clippers game. And they apparently made a big enough impression — and contract offer — to land the man they wanted all along. Kerr FROM PAGE 1 By Josh Dubow The Associated Press SANJOSE San Jose Sharks general manager Doug Wil- son is wasting no time mak- ing changes after perhaps his team's most crushing playoff collapse. Wilson said Thursday that he told pending unre- stricted free agent defense- man Dan Boyle that he will not be re-signed, informed unproductive forward Marty Havlat that he will not be back next season and moved top-line wing Brent Burns back to defense after spending more than a year as a forward on captain Joe Thornton's line. These changes all come two weeks after the Sharks became the fourth team in NHL history to lose a best- of-seven series after win- ning the first three games. Wilson spent the past two weeks meeting with coaches and players to help deter- mine what went wrong in the final four games against Los Angeles and how to get a team that has been one of the best in the regular sea- son the past decade over the playoff hump. "You want to be care- ful not to change too many things, but you better be re- ally careful that you're not just avoiding what really needs to take place," Wilson said. "There's two sides to that. I think what we need to do is much more drastic than just putting a Band- aide on it." Wilson said the moves this offseason will build on the moves made at the trade deadline in 2013, when the Sharks dealt away Ryane Clowe, Douglas Murray and Michal Handzus in an ef- fort to become a faster and younger team. Those moves helped San Jose make it all the way to Game 7 of the second round before losing to Los Angeles a year ago and Wilson said the team is about two-thirds of the way to completing the overhaul. The team appeared closer than that after win- ning the first three games against the Kings but was unable to close the series out. Wilson blamed the col- lapse on allowing too many odd-man rushes, a power play that went scoreless on its last 16 chances, a lack of effort in Game 5 and a late- game collapse in Game 6 af- ter a disputed goal was al- lowed. "Our relationship with our fans has been strained and we've got to go and re- earn that trust," Wilson said. Boyle has been a key part of the Sharks since be- ing acquired in a trade from Tampa Bay in July 2008. His 68 goals and 201 assists in six seasons make him the career leader in both cate- gories in franchise history and he has been a staple on the power-play unit. He will be replaced on the blue line by Burns, who spent his first year and a half in San Jose on defense before making the move to forward in March 2013. Burns had a career-high 22 goals this season along with 26 assists as he teamed with Thornton on a physi- cally imposing line that con- trolled play for much of the season. But Wilson said he is needed now on defense and compared Burns' potential impact there to Montreal's P.K. Subban, Winnipeg's Dustin Byfuglien and Los Angeles' Drew Doughty. "When you take a look at that type of dynamic on the back end, guys that move the puck up, shoot the puck on the power play, it creates a tough matchup," Wilson said. "When he was origi- nally moved up to forward, it was because of an injury. He was coming back and he was having trouble with certain parts of his skating." Havlat scored 27 goals in three injury-plagued sea- sons with San Jose after being acquired from Min- nesota in a trade for Dany Heatley. Havlat fell out of fa- vor with the coaching staff and was a healthy scratch in six of seven playoff games. He is owed $6 million in the final year of his contract and will either be bought out or dealt. Wilson would not divulge what other changes he had planned but did say some of those could come in the team's player leadership. NHL Sharks make roster changes Boyle, Havlat won't be back, Burns goes back to defense gun down a runner at home plate to keep the shutout in- tact. Zazueta turned a double play at second to seal the game in the seventh inning. Akins added an RBI dou- ble in the fourth inning off of Foothill reliever Lexi Brad- shaw that scored Jones, who worked a full-count walk to reach first. Bradshaw had come into the game to pitch for Foot- hill in the third inning. Jenny McCluskey was hit by a pitch to start the sixth inning. She advanced when Grannes reached base on an error. Grannes then be- came the lead runner when McCluskey was forced out at third on a fielder's choice. Two batters later, Za- zueta singled to load the bases and Grannes scored to make it 6-0 on a Jones RBI infield single. The win completed a three-game sweep of Foot- hill (26-10) this week. Foothill started the week ranked No. 1 in the North- ern Section's Division-III playoff points. Despite the win streak and a 9-3 Sac River League record, Red Bluff still trailed in points after tak- ing the first two games from Foothill. The playoff commit- tee meets Saturday to de- termine the Division-III bracket, but Red Bluff of- ficials announced follow- ing Thursday's game that Foothill would come back to Red Bluff at 4 p.m. Tues- day for a first-round play- off game. Apparently that means Enterprise, ranked third in points, will jump both Red Bluff and Foothill for the top seed since the Lady Hornets are Sac River League cham- pions. Enterprise was 10-1 in league play entering its fi- nal game and 25-9 overall. So ball FROM PAGE 1 SCOREBOARD MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB San Francisco 26 15 .634 _ Colorado 23 19 .548 3 ½ Los Angeles 22 20 .524 4 ½ San Diego 20 22 .476 6 ½ Arizona 16 27 .372 11 CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Milwaukee 26 15 .634 _ St. Louis 21 20 .512 5 Cincinnati 18 21 .462 7 Pittsburgh 17 23 .425 8 ½ Chicago 13 26 .333 12 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB Atlanta 22 17 .564 _ Washington 21 19 .525 1 ½ Miami 21 20 .512 2 New York 19 21 .475 3 ½ Philadelphia 17 21 .447 4 ½ Wednesday'sgames L.A. Angels 3, Philadelphia 0 Kansas City 3, Colorado 2 Washington 5, Arizona 1 San Francisco 10, Atlanta 4 N.Y. Yankees 4, N.Y. Mets 0 San Diego at Cincinnati, ppd., rain Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 1 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, ppd., rain Miami 13, L.A. Dodgers 3 Thursday'sgames Cincinnati 5, San Diego 0, 1st game Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 3 St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 3 San Diego 6, Cincinnati 1, 2nd game N.Y. Yankees 1, N.Y. Mets 0 Miami at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m. Friday'sgames Milwaukee (Lohse 4-1) at Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 0-3), 11:20 a.m. Cincinnati (Simon 4-2) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 0-3), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-2) at Washington (Roark 2-1), 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Volquez 1-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (E.Santana 4-0) at St. Louis (Lynn 4-2), 5:15 p.m. San Diego (Stults 2-3) at Colorado (J.De La Rosa 4-3), 5:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 6-1) at Arizona (Miley 3-3), 6:40 p.m. Miami (H.Alvarez 2-3) at San Francisco (Petit 2-1), 7:15 p.m. Saturday'sgames Atlanta at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 5:10 p.m. San Diego at Colorado, 5:10 p.m. Miami at San Francisco, 6:05 p.m. Sunday'sgames Pittsburgh at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 10:35 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 10:35 a.m. Atlanta at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Miami at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 1:10 p.m. San Diego at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. AMERICANLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Oakland 25 16 .610 _ Los Angeles 21 18 .538 3 Seattle 20 20 .500 4 ½ Texas 20 21 .488 5 Houston 14 27 .341 11 CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Detroit 24 12 .667 _ Kansas City 20 19 .513 5 ½ Minnesota 19 20 .487 6 ½ Chicago 20 22 .476 7 Cleveland 19 22 .463 7 ½ EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB Baltimore 20 18 .526 _ New York 21 19 .525 _ Toronto 21 21 .500 1 Boston 20 20 .500 1 Tampa Bay 18 23 .439 3 ½ Wednesday'sgames Detroit 7, Baltimore 5 L.A. Angels 3, Philadelphia 0 Kansas City 3, Colorado 2 Chicago White Sox 4, Oakland 2 Tampa Bay 2, Seattle 0 Cleveland 15, Toronto 4 N.Y. Yankees 4, N.Y. Mets 0 Boston 9, Minnesota 4 Houston 5, Texas 4 Thursday'sgames Minnesota 4, Boston 3, 10 innings Toronto 4, Cleveland 2 N.Y. Yankees 1, N.Y. Mets 0 Baltimore at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Friday'sgames Oakland (Gray 4-1) at Cleveland (McAl- lister 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Volquez 1-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Detroit (Scherzer 5-1) at Boston (Lester 4-4), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison 1-3) at Texas (Dar- vish 3-1), 5:05 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 3-2) at Kansas City (Guthrie 2-2), 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-3) at Houston (McHugh 2-1), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (C.Young 3-0) at Minnesota (Gibson 3-3), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Archer 2-2) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-2), 7:05 p.m. Saturday'sgames Pittsburgh at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Oakland at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m. Baltimore at Kansas City, 4:10 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Seattle at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 6:05 p.m. Sunday'sgames Oakland at Cleveland, 10:05 a.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Baltimore at Kansas City, 11:10 a.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 11:10 a.m. Seattle at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. Toronto at Texas, 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 5:05 p.m. NBA Playoffs Semifinals (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday,May15 Indiana 93, Washington 80, Indiana wins series 4-2 Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Sunday,May18 x-L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City, 4:30 p.m. Finals (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday,May18 Miami at Indiana, 12:30 p.m. Tuesday,May20 Miami at Indiana, 5:30 p.m. Saturday,May24 Indiana at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Monday,May26 Indiana at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday,May28 x-Miami at Indiana, 5:30 p.m. Friday,May30 x-Indiana at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Sunday,June1 x-Miami at Indiana, 5:30 p.m. Pacers93,Wizards80 PACERS(93) George 4-11 3-4 12, West 13-26 3-5 29, Hibbert 4-8 3-4 11, G.Hill 4-7 2-2 11, Ste- phenson 8-13 1-1 17, Mahinmi 2-2 1-3 5, Scola 1-3 2-2 4, Turner 0-0 0-0 0, Watson 1-2 2-4 4, Copeland 0-0 0-0 0, Butler 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-72 17-25 93. WIZARDS(80) Ariza 1-5 4-4 6, Nene 7-12 1-2 15, Gortat 7-12 5-6 19, Wall 5-16 2-2 12, Beal 7-19 0-0 16, Webster 1-4 2-4 4, Gooden 1-4 2-2 4, Miller 2-3 0-0 4, Harrington 0-2 0-0 0, Temple 0-0 0-0 0, Seraphin 0-1 0-0 0, Porter Jr. 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-79 16-20 80. Indiana 29 23 19 22 — 93 Washington 23 17 23 17 — 80 3-PointGoals: Indiana 2-10 (G.Hill 1-2, George 1-5, Stephenson 0-1, West 0-2), Washington 2-18 (Beal 2-6, Porter Jr. 0-1, Harrington 0-2, Webster 0-2, Ariza 0-3, Wall 0-4);Fouledout: None;Rebounds: Indiana 48 (Hibbert 7), Washington 47 (Ariza 7);Assists: Indiana 18 (Stephen- son 8), Washington 17 (Wall 9);Total fouls: Indiana 23, Washington 23;A: 19,502 (20,308). Golf PGA-BYRONNELSONPAR Thursday At TPC Four Seasons Resort Irving, Texas Purse: $6.9 million Yardage: 7,166;Par: 70 (35-35) (a-amateur) FirstRound Peter Hanson...........................30-35—65 -5 Marc Leishman........................33-33—66 -4 David Duval ..............................32-34—66 -4 Tim Wilkinson..........................33-33—66 -4 Ryan Palmer............................. 34-33—67 -3 Boo Weekley ............................ 33-34—67 -3 John Huh................................... 32-35—67 -3 Tyrone VanAswegen .............. 34-33—67 -3 Alex Cejka................................. 34-33—67 -3 Martin Kaymer ........................ 34-33—67 -3 Alex Prugh................................ 34-33—67 -3 Lee Williams............................. 33-34—67 -3 Tim Herron............................... 35-33—68 -2 Brendon Todd ...........................37-31—68 -2 Louis Oosthuizen .................... 35-33—68 -2 Charles Howell III....................34-34—68 -2 Aaron Baddeley.......................34-34—68 -2 Rod Pampling........................... 36-32—68 -2 Eric Axley.................................. 33-35—68 -2 Jason Allred .............................34-34—68 -2 Graham DeLaet .......................34-34—68 -2 Morgan Hoffmann .................. 33-35—68 -2 Gary Woodland........................34-34—68 -2 Ryan Moore...............................31-37—68 -2 Mike Weir ................................. 35-33—68 -2 Padraig Harrington................. 35-33—68 -2 Ben Crane................................. 33-35—68 -2 Miguel Angel Carballo ...........34-34—68 -2 Sean O'Hair .............................. 33-36—69 -1 Vijay Singh ............................... 34-35—69 -1 Dustin Johnson........................ 34-35—69 -1 Derek Ernst .............................. 36-33—69 -1 Carl Pettersson....................... 36-33—69 -1 Brice Garnett........................... 34-35—69 -1 Danny Lee................................. 34-35—69 -1 Edward Loar............................. 35-34—69 -1 Jim Renner................................ 36-33—69 -1 Matt Kuchar............................. 35-34—69 -1 Brandt Snedeker..................... 34-35—69 -1 Chad Campbell.........................32-37—69 -1 Luke Guthrie ............................ 36-33—69 -1 Chris Thompson...................... 34-35—69 -1 Kevin Kisner............................. 35-34—69 -1 Hudson Swafford.....................32-37—69 -1 Michael Putnam........................37-33—70 E Jason Dufner..............................35-35—70 E John Senden...............................33-37—70 E Jordan Spieth.............................35-35—70 E J.J. Henry ....................................34-36—70 E Jhonattan Vegas .......................35-35—70 E Stephen Ames ...........................35-35—70 E Andrew Svoboda.......................32-38—70 E Billy Hurley III ............................35-35—70 E Daniel Chopra............................36-34—70 E Steve Marino..............................37-33—70 E Brian Davis .................................35-35—70 E Martin Flores .............................35-35—70 E Keegan Bradley.........................36-34—70 E Rory Sabbatini...........................35-35—70 E Ken Duke.....................................35-35—70 E Retief Goosen ............................35-35—70 E Kris Blanks .................................37-33—70 E James Driscoll ...........................35-35—70 E Jim Herman................................37-33—70 E Kevin Foley.................................34-36—70 E Scott Gardiner...........................37-33—70 E Patrick Cantlay..........................35-35—70 E Andres Romero ...................... 35-36—71 +1 Greg Chalmers ....................... 35-36—71 +1 Harris English ......................... 35-36—71 +1 Bryce Molder ...........................34-37—71 +1 David Toms.............................. 35-36—71 +1 Spencer Levin......................... 35-36—71 +1 Tag Ridings.............................. 35-36—71 +1 Chris Smith...............................34-37—71 +1 Troy Merritt..............................37-34—71 +1 Troy Matteson ........................ 36-35—71 +1 James Hahn..............................34-37—71 +1 Josh Teater.............................. 38-33—71 +1 Chad Collins............................ 36-35—71 +1 Jimmy Walker ..........................34-37—71 +1 Harrison Frazar...................... 35-36—71 +1 Jonathan Byrd..........................34-37—71 +1 Brian Gay..................................34-37—71 +1 Paul Casey............................... 36-35—71 +1 John Peterson......................... 38-33—71 +1 Marcel Siem.............................37-34—71 +1 a-Scottie Scheffler ................ 33-38—71 +1 Brian Harman ......................... 38-34—72 +2 Joe Ogilvie................................35-37—72 +2 Jeff Overton ............................ 36-36—72 +2 Briny Baird .............................. 36-36—72 +2 Will Wilcox .............................. 36-36—72 +2 Stuart Deane........................... 36-36—72 +2 Benjamin Alvarado................ 38-34—72 +2 Gary Christian .........................37-35—72 +2 Colt Knost................................ 36-36—72 +2 Ricky Barnes........................... 39-33—72 +2 Steven Bowditch .....................37-35—72 +2 Robert Allenby.........................37-35—72 +2 Brendan Steele........................35-37—72 +2 Charlie Beljan ..........................35-37—72 +2 Doug LaBelle II........................ 40-32—72 +2 Brad Fritsch .............................35-37—72 +2 Alex Carpenter........................37-35—72 +2 Justin Hicks............................. 38-35—73 +3 Matt Bettencourt....................37-36—73 +3 D.J. Trahan............................... 35-38—73 +3 Sang-Moon Bae...................... 35-38—73 +3 Tim Clark ................................. 39-34—73 +3 Johnson Wagner..................... 38-35—73 +3 Brendon de Jonge ...................36-37—73 +3 John Daly ................................. 35-38—73 +3 Ryo Ishikawa........................... 35-38—73 +3 Charlie Wi.................................36-37—73 +3 Steve Flesch.............................36-37—73 +3 Peter Malnati...........................37-36—73 +3 John Rollins..............................37-36—73 +3 Angel Cabrera .........................37-36—73 +3 Charl Schwartzel ................... 35-38—73 +3 Ben Curtis.................................36-37—73 +3 Tommy Gainey.........................37-36—73 +3 Tim Petrovic............................ 39-34—73 +3 Dicky Pride...............................36-37—73 +3 Heath Slocum ......................... 34-39—73 +3 Bronson La'Cassie..................37-36—73 +3 Mark Anderson....................... 35-38—73 +3 Alex Aragon .............................37-36—73 +3 Jamie Lovemark ..................... 34-39—73 +3 Cameron Beckman................ 38-36—74 +4 Shawn Stefani......................... 36-38—74 +4 Greg Owen ..............................34-40—74 +4 D.A. Points............................... 39-35—74 +4 Ted Potter, Jr........................... 36-38—74 +4 Freddie Jacobson....................37-37—74 +4 Trevor Immelman................... 36-38—74 +4 Bud Cauley .............................. 35-39—74 +4 Bobby Gates............................ 36-38—74 +4 Robert Garrigus ..................... 35-39—74 +4 Ryuji Imada ..............................37-37—74 +4 Kyle Stanley ............................ 36-38—74 +4 Kevin Tway .............................. 39-35—74 +4 Brooks Koepka ....................... 36-38—74 +4 Nicholas Thompson...............35-40—75 +5 Justin Leonard........................ 38-37—75 +5 Richard H. Lee ........................ 38-37—75 +5 REGIONSTRADITIONPAR Thursday At Shoal Creek Birmingham, Ala. Purse: $2.2 million Yardage: 7,231;Par: 72 (36-36) FirstRound Jay Haas.................................... 34-35—69 -3 Mark Calcavecchia................. 36-33—69 -3 Chien Soon Lu.......................... 33-36—69 -3 Olin Browne .............................35-34—69 -3 Corey Pavin...............................35-35—70 -2 Steve Elkington ........................34-36—70 -2 Willie Wood...............................34-36—70 -2 Marco Dawson..........................34-37—71 -1 Bill Glasson ...............................34-37—71 -1 John Cook..................................35-36—71 -1 LPGA-KINGSMILL CHAMPIONSHIPPAR Thursday At Kingsmill Resort, River Course Williamsburg, Virginia Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,347;Par: 71 (36-35) (a-amateur) FirstRound Austin Ernst ............................. 33-32—65 -6 Azahara Munoz ....................... 32-33—65 -6 Hee Young Park....................... 32-34—66 -5 Kathleen Ekey..........................33-34—67 -4 Danielle Kang........................... 37-30—67 -4 Cristie Kerr...............................34-33—67 -4 Brittany Lang...........................34-33—67 -4 Lizette Salas ............................33-34—67 -4 Thidapa Suwannapura........... 36-31—67 -4 Tennis INTERNAZIONALI BNLD'ITALIA RESULTS Thursday At Foro Italico Rome Purse: Men, $4.77 million (Masters 1000);Women,$3.63million(Premier) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles MEN ThirdRound Tommy Haas (15), Germany, vs. Stan- islas Wawrinka (3), Switzerland, 5-7, 6-2, 6-3. Milos Raonic (8), Canada, def. Jo- Wilfried Tsonga (11), France, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Andy Murray (7), Britain, def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 7-6 (1), 6-4. Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 6-3, 6-2. Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Mikhail Youzhny (14), Russia, 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-1. Grigor Dimitrov (12), Bulgaria, def. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-2. David Ferrer (5), Spain, def. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, 6-2, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1. WOMEN ThirdRound Carla Suarez Navarro (13), Spain, def. Simona Halep (4), Romania, walkover. Li Na (2), China, def. Sam Stosur, Austra- lia, 6-3, 6-1. Sara Errani (10), Italy, def. Petra Cet- kovska, Czech Republic, 6-4, 7-6 (3). Agnieszka Radwanska (3), Poland, def. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, 6-4, 6-1. Ana Ivanovic (11), Serbia, def. Maria Sharapova (8), Russia, 6-1, 6-4. Zhang Shuai, China, def. Christina McHale, United States, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2. Jelena Jankovic (6), Serbia, def. Flavia Pennetta (12), Italy, 6-2, 6-3. Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 6-1, 6-2. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For May 16 MajorLeagueBaseball NATIONALLEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Chicago -115/+105 Milwaukee at Washington -135/+125 New York Cincinnati -110/+100 at Phil at St. Louis -115/+105 Atlanta at Colorado -145/+135 San Diego Los Angeles -135/+125 at Arizona at SF -140/+130 Miami AMERICANLEAGUE Oakland -125/+115 at Cleveland at Boston -110/+100 Detroit at Texas -165/+155 Toronto Baltimore -110/+100 at Kansas City at Houston -120/+110 Chicago at Minnesota -115/+105 Seattle at Los Angeles -140/+130 Tampa Bay INTERLEAGUE at New York (AL) -130/+120 Pittsburgh NBA SUNDAY Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Indiana 4½ (179½) Washington at Oklahoma City 5 (210½) Clippers NHL TONIGHT Favorite Line Underdog at Anaheim -120/+100 Los Angeles TOMORROW at Montreal -125/+105 N.Y. Rangers ODDSTOWINSERIES Montreal -110/-110 N.Y. Rangers Soccer TOMORROW FACup Final AtLondon Favorite Line Underdog Arsenal -370/+300 Hull City Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague BaltimoreOrioles: Optioned RHPs Preston Guilmet and Kevin Gausman to Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHP Evan Meek from Norfolk. ChicagoWhiteSox: Sent LHP Chris Sale and OF Adam Eaton to Charlotte (IL) for rehab assignments. ClevelandIndians: Placed OF Nyjer Morgan on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Jesus Aguilar from Columbus (IL). HoustonAstros: Placed RHP Anthony Bass on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to Sunday. Recalled RHP Josh Fields from Oklahoma City (PCL). MinnesotaTwins: Optioned OF Oswaldo Arcia to Rochester (IL). NewYorkYankees: Reinstated RHP Bruce Billings from the 15-day DL and designated him for assignment. Placed OF Carlos Beltran on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to Tuesday. Selected the contract of RHP Chase Whitley from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). OaklandAthletics: Acquired Of/1B Klye Banks from San Diego for OF Jake Goebbert and a player to be named and/ or cash considerations. Designated 1B Daric Barton for assignment. TampaBayRays: Placed 2B Ben Zobrist on the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of INF Cole Figueroa from Durham (IL). TexasRangers: Sent LHP Joe Saunders and 2B Donnie Murphy to Round Rock (PCL) for rehab assignments. TorontoBlueJays: Placed OF Colby Rasmus on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to Tuesday. Recalled OF Anthony Gose from Buffalo (IL). NationalLeague ChicagoCubs: Placed LHP Zac Rosscup on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to Satur- day. Reinstated RHP Jose Veras from the 15-day DL. CincinnatiReds: Optioned RHP Nick Christiani to Louisville (IL). Selected the contract of LHP Jeff Francis from Louisville. Transferred RHP Mat Latos to the 60-day DL. MiamiMarlins: Selected the contract of RHP Anthony DeSclafani from Jackson- ville (SL). MilwaukeeBrewers: Sent LHP Tom Gorzelanny to Brevard County (FSL) for a rehab assignment. NewYorkMets: Transferred RHP Bobby Parnell to the 60-day DL. Assigned RHP Kyle Farnsworth outright to Las Vegas (PCL). Placed C Travis d'arnaud on the 7-day Dl, retroactive to Wednesday. Recalled LHP Josh Edgin and C Juan Centeno from Las Vegas. PhiladelphiaPhillies: Sent RHP Miguel Alfredo Gonzalez to Clearwater (FSL) for a rehab assignment. PittsburghPirates: Optioned OF Jaff Decker to Indianapolis (IL). Reinstated LHP Wandy Rodriguez from the 15-day DL. SanDiegoPadres: Reinstated RHP Dale Thayer from paternity leave. WashingtonNationals: Sent RHP Ross Ohlendorf to Potomac (Carolina) for a rehab assignment. AmericanAssociation Fargo-MoorheadRedhawks: Signed INF Andy White. GarySouthshoreRailcats: Traded OF Cody Bishop to Lake Erie for a player to | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2014 2 B

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