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J.PATCARTER—THEASSOCIATEDPRESS Oakland Athletics runner Coco Crisp (4) and Miami Marlins catcher Jeff Mathis (6) wait for home plate umpire Marty Foster to rule if Crisp was safe at home during the ninth inning Friday in Miami. A er a video review, he was ruled safe. He scored on a hit by Yoenis Cespedes. The A's won 9-5. ByStevenWine The Associated Press MIAMI Withthescoretied in the ninth inning, Coco Crisp slid across home plate on a close play, rose and signaled safe as um- pire Marty Foster indi- cated out. A 3½-minute replay re- view determined Foster was wrong and Crisp was right. Thanks to the ruling re- versal, Crisp scored the first of four runs in the in- ning off closer Steve Cis- hek, and the Oakland Ath- letics bounced back after blowing a four-run lead to beat the Miami Marlins 9-5 on Friday night. "We just go out there and keep battling," Crisp said. Josh Reddick's two-out RBI triple tied the game in the eighth. Crisp singled to start the ninth against Cishek (4-3) and took sec- ond on Alberto Callaspo's single. When Yoenis Ces- pedes followed with a sin- gle, right fielder Giancarlo Stanton made a strong throw home, and Crisp was ruled out at the plate. After the lengthy delib- eration, the call was over- turned to give the A's a 6-5 lead, and their dugout erupted in celebration. "It's a huge game- changer, so you're still go- ing to be pumped up no matter whether it's 5 min- utes after it or right when it happens," Reddick said. "Fortunately they made the right call up in New York." Josh Donaldson hit a A's score 4 in ninth to beat Marlins 9-5 Crispscoresgo-aheadruna erreplayreviewreversal BASEBALL By Stephen Wilson The Associated Press LONDON Novak Djokovic lay crumpled on Centre Court, clutching his upper left arm and grimacing. He felt something pop and feared the worst. Djokovic had lunged for a shot behind the baseline, tumbled on the grass and rolled over twice, his racket flying from his hand. His new coach, Boris Becker, stood in the player's box and looked on gravely. Slowly, Djokovic rose from the turf, still holding his arm across his chest and made his way to his chair. "When I stood up, I felt that click or pop, whatever you call it," he said later. "I feared maybe it might be a dislocated shoulder or something like that." It wasn't. After a medical time- out and treatment from a trainer, the top-seeded Djokovic needed just four more games to complete a 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 win over France's Gilles Simon on Friday, sending him into the fourth round and keep- ing alive his bid for a sec- ond Wimbledon title and seventh Grand Slam cham- pionship. "Luckily there is nothing damaged," Djokovic said. "I just came from the doc- tor's office, ultrasound. It's all looking good. I'm quite confident that it will not affect my physical state or regimen or daily routine. I think it's going to be fine." Djokovic will have two days off before an intriguing matchup Monday against another Frenchman, the free-swinging 14th-seeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. "They told me usually in these kind of particular cases you might feel sore- ness in the next couple of days," Djokovic said. "But I can play around with prac- tices and recovery and see how it goes. But I'm quite confident it's going to be all right for next one." He felt all right enough to joke that he had talked to Becker about improving his style. "We obviously need to work on my diving volleys, learning how to fall down on the court," he said. "I'm not very skillful in that." Djokovic's injury scare came on a day that also featured the elimination of second-seeded woman Li Na and a three-set, 2 ½- hour Centre Court battle between two former female champions — with 2011 winner Petra Kvitova over- coming five-time champ Ve- nus Williams 5-7, 7-6 (2), 7-5. Defending men's cham- pion Andy Murray, who hasn't dropped a set this week, extended his win- ning streak at the All Eng- land Club to 16 matches by beating Roberto Bautista Agut of Spain 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. The streak goes back to his gold-medal run at the 2012 London Olympics, which was played at Wimbledon. No. 6 Tomas Berdych, runner-up at Wimbledon four years ago, became the highest-seeded man to go out so far when he fell to No. 26 Marin Cilic 7-6 (5) 6-4, 7-6 (6) in a match that finished in near darkness at 9:36 p.m. Berdych, who had called for play to be suspended because of the fading light, hit a forehand long on the second match point. Cilic finished with 20 aces. Li, the Australian Open champion, fell 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5) to 43rd-ranked Barbora Zahlavova Strycova of the Czech Republic in the first major upset of the tourna- ment. Since winning her second Grand Slam title in Melbourne in January, Li has lost in the first round of the French Open and now failed to reach the second week at Wimbledon. Li double-faulted on match point — after the point was replayed when she won a challenge on a forehand that had been called out. Joining Kvitova and Zahlavova Strycova in the fourth round were two other Czechs, Lucie Safa- rova and Tereza Smitkova —the first time in the Open era four Czech women have reached the final 16 at a Grand Slam. Kvitova beat Williams for the fourth time in five matches. All have gone to three sets. Williams and Kvitova WIMBLEDON TENNIS Djokovic overcomes fall, injury scare, takes victory Top seed tumbles on grass, still wins in straight sets SANG TAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Novak Djokovic of Serbia plays a return against Gilles Simon of France during a men's singles match Friday at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London. Djokovic won the match 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. TENNIS PAGE 2 A'S9,MARLINS5 Up next: Today, Oakland A's at Miami Marlins, 1:10 p.m., TV on CSN. THESCORE A'S PAGE 2 12149 Highway 99 W, Red Bluff www.southmainstorage.com NEW MOVE-IN SPECIALS! 888-820-7250 SOUTH MAIN MINI STORAGE • Low Price Guarantee! • No Deposit or Admin Fees! • Drive-up Units. • Individually alarmed. • 24-hour video survelliance. 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