Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/381658
game from running back Al House, who notched 190 yards, three touchdowns and an interception before leaving the game late in the third quarter for apparent heat exhaustion. The Timberjacks, who heavily relied on run- ning back Brandon Klop- fer and quarterback Joe Nagle to carry them to victory, quickly regained control of the game at the start of the second half as JerRed Humphrey ran back a Mercy on-side kick attempt to tie the game at 14. On Hayfork's next pos- session, Nagle would give his team a lead it wouldn't relinquish by capping a five-play drive from the Warriors 44 with a 9-yard rushing TD. Nagle notched three rushing TDs on the day, and Klopfer scored two TDs on the ground, includ- ing a 34-yard dagger with about 3:44 remaining in the game to give the Tim- berjacks a 42-26 lead. Mercy's William Gen- try ran in a 16-yard touch- down early in the fourth quarter to cut Hayfork's lead to 30-26. The Warriors open league play at 7 p.m. Fri- day at Greenville (1-2). "I'm looking forward to that," Benefield said. "These teams here are ones that, when I used to coach years ago at Chester, these are the teams that were in our league. So now I'm go- ing back 15 years — like in a time capsule — I'm going back to when I first started coaching." Mercy FROMPAGE1 By Josh Dubow The Associated Press ALAMEDA After an offsea- son overhaul that brought on board veteran players with playoff pedigrees, the Oakland Raiders were opti- mistic for a turnaround af- ter back-to-back four-win seasons. After just two games, that optimism has quickly turned to frustration and disbelief as the Raiders have been physically dom- inated in losing to the New York Jets and Houston Tex- ans. With a trip to New Eng- land this week to face the Patriots followed by a "home" game in England against Miami, the Raid- ers (0-2) need to fix things quickly or the season could spiral out of control. "We're two weeks into the season. At the same time, you don't want to bury your head in the sand," coach Dennis Allen said Monday. "We've got to get better. We need to do it fast." The disappointment is already mounting with vet- eran safety Charles Wood- son sounding off after the game, saying he was em- barrassed by the team's play and that the perfor- mance in the 30-14 loss to Houston "sucked." "I think that's something that is spoken out of frus- tration," Allen said. "When you watch Charles Wood- son play in that game and the effort that he gave in that game and the pas- sion in which he played in that game, it's a tough pill to swallow. When you go out there and don't per- form like you're capable of performing. He gave every- thing he had in that game and we have to get more guys playing like that." The biggest issues have been on run defense, where the Raiders have allowed an NFL-worst 400 yards rush- ing in just two weeks. They have been gashed by long runs from Chris Ivory in the opener and Arian Fos- ter on Sunday and have con- sistently been beaten at the line of scrimmage despite the additions of Justin Tuck, LaMarr Woodley and Anto- nio Smith in the offseason. The problems were espe- cially bad at the start of the game when Foster had 12 carries for 76 yards on the first two drives as the Tex- ans took a 14-0 lead. "You can't allow a team to just run the football down the field on you," Allen said. "That has to change. Like I told the players today, run defense is a mentality. Run defense is about lining up across from somebody, hitting them in the mouth, knock- ing them back, getting off a block, and making a play. That's what run defense is all about. Until we get to that point, where we un- derstand that, then we're not going to be very good at run defense." EAGLES 30, COLTS 27 Nick Foles threw a tying touch- down pass with 3:25 to go, and then set up Cody Par- key for the winning 36- yard field goal as time ex- pired, lifting Philadelphia to a 30-27 win at Indianap- olis on Monday night. TheEagles(2-0)havewon six straight road openers. PETERSON RETURNS TO VI- KINGS The Vikings re- instated running back Adrian Peterson, one day after he sat out a 30-7 home loss to the New Eng- land Patriots after he was charged with a felony in Texas for using a wooden switch to spank his son. Peterson, who said he was using a form of dis- cipline his father used on him as a boy, is expected to play against the New Or- leans Saints on Sunday. NFL ROUNDUP Raiders feeling frustrated a er 0-2 start to season BECKDIEFENBACH—ASSOCIATEDPRESS Oakland Raiders running back Darren McFadden, right, carries the ball for a touchdown on a 1-yard run as Houston Texans inside linebacker Brian Cushing, le , pursues in the fourth quarte on Sunday. Red Bluff wouldn't re- cover. Anderson quarterback Mikey Maasen added his second rushing touch- down early in the fourth quarter to cap the scoring. Maasen also threw a 56- yard touchdown to Austin Sturges. He finished 4-for-7 for 101 yards and rushed 15 times for 64 yards. Tyler Webb carried 12 times for 127 yards and a touchdown for Anderson's other score and Kingston rushed nine times for 105 yards. Lewis finished 8-for- 20 for 71 yards. Him and the Spartans was hurt by a handful of drops in the first half. KJ Hinkston led the Spartans rushing attack with 68 yards on 13 car- ries. Lewis picked up 23 yards on 12 carries. Daniel Koenig had 23 yards on three carries, but left the game in the first half with a shoulder injury. David Stroud carried twice for 10 yards and Joey Dagen had a 7-yard carry. Dagen also caught a pass as did Joey Skaggs and Loen Langley. Hinkston caught three balls for 15 yards. Clement nabbed two for 24 yards. Red Bluff limps into the 50th all-time meeting with rival Corning (1-1), who was walloped by Pleasant Valley Friday, in the Te- hama County Shootout. The game is 7:30 p.m. Sept. 19 in Red Bluff. Red Bluff FROM PAGE 1 language" penalty on Kae- pernick after intervening in an exchange with Hous- ton, told CSNBayArea.com: "He knows what he said. ... It was the right call." Kyle Fuller's first of two interceptions came at the 49ers' 26-yard line, and he returned it 20 yards. Kaepernick's penalty only moved the ball up three yards to the 49ers' 6, where Jay Cutler threw a go-ahead touchdown pass on the next snap to Mar- tellus Bennett. A league spokesman re- ferred inquiries about Kae- pernick's penalty to Rule 12, Section 3, Article 1 of the rule book regarding unsportsmanlike conduct and prohibited acts, such as: "Using abusive, threat- ening, or insulting lan- guage or gestures to op- ponents, teammates, offi- cials, or representatives of the League." A preseason video about rule changes informed players, "this includes ra- cial slurs, comments re- garding sexual orientation or other verbal abuse. Ac- tions such as these will re- sult in 15 yard penalties and potential discipline." Kaepernick's penalty was among 16 enforced against the 49ers, their most since 16 in a Jan. 3, 2000 loss at Atlanta. Harbaugh said of the penalties: "We'll try to be better for it. That's some- thing we'll work on." The 49ers aren't waver- ing in their stance on Ray McDonald, who's prac- ticed every day and played in both games following his Aug. 31 arrest on sus- picion of domestic violence. Harbaugh was unaware that Lt. Gov. Gavin New- som issued a statement prior to Sunday's game calling for the 49ers to bench McDonald "pending the outcome of his felony domestic violence investi- gation by San Jose law en- forcement." "You've seen there's been a lot of public spec- ulation and people weigh- ing in with their opinion, whether it's a public figure or people through social media," Harbaugh said. "Our response would be there are two principles at play here. One is to respect due process. We're not go- ing to flinch based on pub- lic speculation." Harbaugh declined to state whether he be- lieves McDonald is inno- cent or not. An NFL Net- work report cited a team official Sunday that the 49ers think McDonald is telling the truth, and if proven otherwise, he'll be released. 49ers FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB LosAngeles 85 64 .570 _ San Francisco 82 67 .550 3 San Diego 68 80 .459 161/2 Arizona 61 88 .409 24 Colorado 59 90 .396 26 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB St. Louis 83 67 .553 _ Pittsburgh 79 70 .530 31/2 Milwaukee 78 72 .520 5 Cincinnati 71 80 .470 121/2 Chicago 66 84 .440 17 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 86 63 .577 _ Atlanta 75 75 .500 111/2 Miami 73 76 .490 13 New York 72 79 .477 15 Philadelphia 69 80 .463 17 Sunday's games Washington 3, N.Y. Mets 0 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Miami 5, Philadelphia 4 Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 4, Colorado 1 Texas 10, Atlanta 3 L.A. Dodgers 4, San Francisco 2 Arizona 8, San Diego 6 Monday's games Miami 6, N.Y. Mets 5 Washington 4, Atlanta 2 Chicago Cubs 1, Cincinnati 0 L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. Philadelphia at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. Tuesday's games Boston (Ranaudo 3-2) at Pittsburgh (Morton 5-12), 4:05 p.m. Mi am i ( Eo va ldi 6 -1 1) a t N .Y. M et s (B.Colon 13-12), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 13-10) at Atlanta (Harang 11-10), 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 18-8) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 8-5), 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee (W.Peralta 16-10) at St. Louis (Lynn 15-9), 5:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Haren 13-10) at Colorado (Matzek 5-10), 5:40 p.m. San Francisco (Peavy 5-4) at Arizona (Collmenter 10-7), 6:40 p.m. Philadelphia (A.Burnett 8-16) at San Diego (Kennedy 10-13), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday's games L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 12:10 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 12:40 p.m. Boston at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Miami at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. Philadelphia at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Los Angeles 93 56 .624 _ Oakland 83 66 .557 10 Seattle 80 68 .541 121/2 Houston 67 83 .447 261/2 Texas 57 92 .383 36 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Detroit 83 66 .557 _ Kansas City 81 67 .547 11/2 Cleveland 76 73 .510 7 Chicago 68 81 .456 15 Minnesota 63 86 .423 20 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Baltimore 90 60 .600 _ Toronto 77 72 .517 121/2 New York 76 73 .510 131/2 Tampa Bay 73 78 .483 171/2 Boston 66 84 .440 24 Sunday's games Tampa Bay 6, Toronto 5, 10 innings Detroit 6, Cleveland 4 Boston 8, Kansas City 4 Minnesota 6, Chicago White Sox 4 Texas 10, Atlanta 3 Houston 6, L.A. Angels 1 Oakland 4, Seattle 0 Baltimore 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Monday's games Baltimore 5, Toronto 2 Tampa Bay 1, N.Y. Yankees 0 Houston 3, Cleveland 1 Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Tuesday's games Boston (Ranaudo 3-2) at Pittsburgh (Morton 5-12), 4:05 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison 10-11) at Baltimore (U.Jimenez 4-9), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 3-4) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 10-12), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Bassitt 0-1) at Kan- sas City (Hendriks 1-2), 5:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 15-9) at Houston (Tropeano 1-0), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Porcello 15-11) at Minnesota (Nolasco 5-11), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Elias 10-12) at L.A. Angels (Cor. Rasmus 3-1), 7:05 p.m. Texas (Tepesch 4-10) at Oakland (Kazmir 14-8), 7:05 p.m. Wednesday's games Boston at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Toronto at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Cleveland at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Football AMERICAN CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 2 0 01.000 55 41 San Diego 1 1 0 .500 47 39 Oakland 0 2 0 .000 28 49 Kansas City 0 2 0 .000 27 50 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Buffalo 2 0 01.000 52 30 Miami 1 1 0 .500 43 49 N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 .500 43 45 New England 1 1 0 .500 50 40 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Houston 2 0 01.000 47 20 Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 36 36 Jacksonville 0 2 0 .000 27 75 Indianapolis 0 2 0 .000 51 61 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 2 0 01.000 47 26 Baltimore 1 1 0 .500 42 29 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .500 36 53 Cleveland 1 1 0 .500 53 54 NATIONAL CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 2 0 01.000 43 31 Seattle 1 1 0 .500 57 46 San Francisco1 1 0 .500 48 45 St. Louis 1 1 0 .500 25 51 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 2 0 01.000 64 44 Washington 1 1 0 .500 47 27 Dallas 1 1 0 .500 43 38 N.Y. Giants 0 2 0 .000 28 60 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 2 0 01.000 44 21 Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 47 58 New Orleans 0 2 0 .000 58 63 Tampa Bay 0 2 0 .000 31 39 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 1 1 0 .500 48 43 Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 41 36 Detroit 1 1 0 .500 42 38 Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 47 60 Thursday's game Baltimore 26, Pittsburgh 6 Sunday's games Dallas 26, Tennessee 10 New England 30, Minnesota 7 Buffalo 29, Miami 10 Washington 41, Jacksonville 10 Arizona 25, N.Y. Giants 14 Cleveland 26, New Orleans 24 Cincinnati 24, Atlanta 10 Carolina 24, Detroit 7 San Diego 30, Seattle 21 St. Louis 19, Tampa Bay 17 Houston 30, Oakland 14 Denver 24, Kansas City 17 Green Bay 31, N.Y. Jets 24 Chicago 28, San Francisco 20 Monday's game Philadelphia 30, Indianapolis 27 Thursday, Sep. 18 Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 5:25 p.m. Eagles 30, Colts 27 Philadelphia 3 3 14 10 — 30 Indianapolis 7 10 3 7 — 27 First quarter Phi — FG Parkey 31, 9:48. Ind — Bradshaw 1 pass from Luck (Vina- tieri kick), 5:18. Second quarter Ind — FG Vinatieri 46, 13:18. Phi — FG Parkey 23, 6:36. Ind — Doyle 2 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 1:13. Third quarter Ind — FG Vinatieri 27, 6:43. Phi — McCoy 1 run (Parkey kick), 4:32. Phi — Sproles 19 run (Parkey kick), 2:44. Fourth quarter Ind — Bradshaw 7 pass from Luck (Vina- tieri kick), 11:49. Phi — Maclin 6 pass from Foles (Parkey kick), 3:25. Phi — FG Parkey 36, :00. A — 64,871. Phi Ind First downs 24 25 Total net yards 458 341 Rushes yds 28-127 38-169 Passing 331 172 Punt returns 4-25 4-44 Ki ck of f r et ur ns 1 -2 1 2- 54 Int ret 1-8 1-0 Comp-att-int 21-37-1 20-34-1 Sacked yds lost 0-0 0-0 Punts 4-53.8 4-55.3 Fumbles lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties yds 11-90 4-70 Time of poss. 23:45 36:15 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — Philadelphia, McCoy 20-79, Sproles 4-26, Foles 4-22. Indianapolis, Richardson 21-79, Bradshaw 13-70, Luck 4-20. Passing — Philadelphia, Foles 21-37-1- 331. Indianapolis, Luck 20-34-1-172. Receiving — Philadelphia, Sproles 7-152, Ertz 4-86, Maclin 4-45, McCoy 4-23, J.Matthews 1-17, Cooper 1-8. Indianapolis, Hilton 6-65, Bradshaw 5-26, Wayne 3-28, Doyle 2-12, Moncrief 1-16, Richardson 1-16, Fleener 1-13, Nicks 1-(minus 4). Missed field goals — Philadelphia, Parkey 38 (WL). COLLEGE FOOTBALL The AP Top 25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first- place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 13, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Florida St. (37) 2-0 1,466 1 2. Oregon (17) 3-0 1,424 2 3. Alabama (1) 3-0 1,346 3 4. Oklahoma (2) 3-0 1,325 4 5. Auburn 2-0 1,252 5 6. Texas A&M (3) 3-0 1,195 7 7. Baylor 3-0 1,134 8 8. LSU 3-0 1,114 10 9. Notre Dame 3-0 917 11 10. Mississippi 3-0 840 14 11. Michigan St. 1-1 832 13 12. UCLA 3-0 807 12 13. Georgia 1-1 729 6 14. South Carolina 2-1 718 24 15. Arizona St. 3-0 680 16 16. Stanford 2-1 560 15 17. Southern Cal 2-1 459 9 18. Missouri 3-0 446 20 19. Wisconsin 1-1 414 18 20. Kansas St. 2-0 326 19 21. BYU 3-0 246 25 22. Clemson 1-1 209 23 23. Ohio St. 2-1 204 22 24. Nebraska 3-0 172 NR 25. Oklahoma St. 2-1 126 NR Others receiving votes: North Carolina 82, Duke 55, Mississippi St. 55, Virginia Tech 54, Penn St. 51, East Carolina 44, TCU 42, Pittsburgh 40, Florida 31, Mar- shall 28, Boston College 22, Washington 14, West Virginia 14, Cincinnati 10, Vir- ginia 6, Arizona 3, Arkansas 3, N. Dakota St. 3, Louisville 2. Golf PGA TOUR MONEY LEADERS YTD Money 1. Rory McIlroy 17 $8,280,096 2. Bubba Watson 21 $6,336,978 3. Jim Furyk 21 $5,987,395 4. Jimmy Walker 27 $5,787,016 5. Sergio Garcia 16 $4,939,606 6. Chris Kirk 28 $4,854,777 7. Billy Horschel 27 $4,814,787 8. Rickie Fowler 26 $4,806,117 9. Matt Kuchar 24 $4,695,515 10. Martin Kaymer 19 $4,532,537 11. Jordan Spieth 27 $4,342,748 12. Dustin Johnson 17 $4,249,180 13. Adam Scott 17 $4,098,588 14. Patrick Reed 28 $4,026,076 15. Justin Rose 19 $3,926,768 16. Jason Day 15 $3,789,574 17. Webb Simpson 25 $3,539,601 18. Brendon Todd 29 $3,396,747 19. Zach Johnson 26 $3,353,417 20. Kevin Na 27 $3,153,107 21. Ryan Moore 24 $3,098,263 22. Hunter Mahan 25 $3,097,983 23. Harris English 28 $2,947,322 24. Ryan Palmer 23 $2,924,300 25. John Senden 27 $2,856,685 26. Bill Haas 28 $2,841,521 27. Hideki Matsuyama 24 $2,837,477 28. Keegan Bradley 26 $2,828,638 29. Gary Woodland 25 $2,734,153 30. Graham DeLaet 24 $2,616,518 31. Russell Henley 29 $2,590,493 32. Marc Leishman 24 $2,558,657 33. Matt Every 26 $2,540,370 34. Brian Harman 32 $2,414,334 35. J.B. Holmes 24 $2,365,204 36. Kevin Stadler 26 $2,300,307 37. Cameron Tringale 31 $2,169,723 38. Phil Mickelson 21 $2,158,019 39. Seung-Yul Noh 27 $2,115,234 40. Kevin Streelman 24 $2,107,994 41. Graeme McDowell 17 $2,077,387 42. Tim Clark 26 $2,066,344 43. George McNeill 24 $2,014,357 44. Charl Schwartzel 18 $1,997,482 45. Charles Howell III 29 $1,997,044 46. Charley Hoffman 25 $1,977,296 47. Matt Jones 25 $1,928,154 48. Freddie Jacobson 27 $1,901,789 49. Henrik Stenson 15 $1,894,235 50. Angel Cabrera 23 $1,868,559 PGA TOUR STATISTICS Final FedExCup Playoffs Points 1, Billy Horschel, 4,750.000. 2, Chris Kirk, 3,100.000. 3, Rory McIlroy, 3,050.000. 4, Jim Furyk, 2,450.000. 5, Bubba Watson, 2,285.000. 6, Hunter Mahan, 1,835.000. 7, Jimmy Walker, 1,667.500. 8, Matt Kuchar, 1,300.000. 9, Rickie Fowler, 1,225.000. 10, Jason Day, 1,200.000. Scoring Average 1, Rory McIlroy, 68.827. 2, Sergio Garcia, 68.950. 3, Jim Furyk, 69.200. 4, Adam Scott, 69.205. 5, Matt Kuchar, 69.416. 6, Dustin Johnson, 69.546. 7, Justin Rose, 69.624. 8, Jason Day, 69.626. 9, Graeme McDowell, 69.642. 10, Charl Schwartzel, 69.671. Driving Distance 1, Bubba Watson, 314.3. 2, Dustin Johnson, 311.0. 3, Rory McIlroy, 310.5. 4 (tie), J.B. Holmes and Andrew Loupe, 308.0. 6, Brooks Koepka, 307.0. 7, Robert Garrigus, 306.1. 8, Jhonattan Vegas, 304.8. 9 (tie), Charles Howell III and Gary Woodland, 304.1. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1, David Toms, 75.49%. 2, Tim Clark, 74.02%. 3, Justin Hicks, 73.46%. 4, Jim Furyk, 73.18%. 5, Heath Slocum, 72.41%. 6, Zach Johnson, 70.51%. 7, Billy Hurley III, 70.44%. 8, Ken Duke, 70.18%. 9, Ryan Moore, 69.92%. 10, Boo Weekley, 69.57%. Greens in Regulation Percentage 1, Chad Campbell, 72.43%. 2, Justin Hicks, 71.44%. 3, Graham DeLaet, 70.68%. 4, Billy Horschel, 70.43%. 5, J.J. Henry, 69.60%. 6, Rory McIlroy, 69.44%. 7, Jhonattan Vegas, 69.11%. 8, Henrik Stenson, 69.03%. 9, Kevin Stadler, 68.91%. 10, Adam Scott, 68.79%. Total Driving 1, Lucas Glover, 74. 2, Henrik Stenson, 78. 3, Hunter Mahan, 81. 4, Hudson Swafford, 82. 5, Derek Ernst, 83. 6 (tie), Kevin Chappell and Shawn Stefani, 84. 8, Keegan Bradley, 86. 9, Graham DeLaet, 89. 10, Adam Scott, 93. Strokes Gained-Putting 1, Graeme McDowell, .886. 2, Aaron Baddeley, .873. 3, Greg Chalmers, .855. 4, Matt Every, .735. 5, Freddie Jacobson, .705. 6, Brendon Todd, .663. 7, Luke Donald, .520. 8, Justin Leonard, .497. 9, Daniel Summerhays, .494. 10, Morgan Hoffmann, .487. Birdie Average 1, R or y Mc Il ro y, 4 .58 . 2, A da m Sco tt , 4. 24 . 3, Jimmy Walker, 4.18. 4, Dustin Johnson, 4.05. 5, Charl Schwartzel, 4.02. 6, Jordan Spieth, 3.97. 7 (tie), Henrik Stenson and Bubba Watson, 3.96. 9, Ryan Palmer, 3.93. 10, 4 tied with 3.89. Eagles (Holes per) 1, Matt Jones, 93.4. 2, Justin Rose, 102.0. 3, Steven Bowditch, 104.6. 4, Will MacK- enzie, 105.4. 5, Dustin Johnson, 114.0. 6 (tie), Billy Horschel and Patrick Reed, 115.7. 8, Ryan Palmer, 117.7. 9, Bubba Watson, 119.5. 10, Marc Leishman, 120.0. Sand Save Percentage 1, Bill Haas, 62.15%. 2, Mike Weir, 61.95%. 3, Vijay Singh, 61.36%. 4, Phil Mickelson, 61.27%. 5, Charlie Wi, 61.02%. 6, Tim Clark, 60.98%. 7, Justin Leonard, 60.58%. 8, Seung-Yul Noh, 60.28%. 9, Jo- nas Blixt, 59.29%. 10, 2 tied with 59.18%. All-Around Ranking 1, Adam Scott, 189. 2 (tie), Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson, 256. 4, Sergio Garcia, 281. 5, Ryan Palmer, 289. 6, Justin Rose, 295. 7, Bubba Watson, 323. 8, Kevin Chappell, 366. 9, Matt Kuchar, 374. 10, Graham DeLaet, 382. Motorsports NASCAR SPRINT CUP POINTS LEADERS Through Sept. 14 1. Brad Keselowski, 2,059. 2. Jeff Gordon, 2,052. 3. Joey Logano, 2,049. 4. Kevin Harvick, 2,047. 5. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,042. 6. Jimmie Johnson, 2,041. 7. Kyle Busch, 2,041. 8. Denny Hamlin, 2,041. 9. Kurt Busch, 2,039. 10. Kasey Kahne, 2,034. 11. Matt Kenseth, 2,034. 12. Carl Edwards, 2,030. 13. Ryan Newman, 2,029. 14. AJ Allmendinger, 2,025. 15. Greg Biffle, 2,021. 16. Aric Almirola, 2,007. 17. Kyle Larson, 779. 18. Clint Bowyer, 751. 19. Jamie McMurray, 742. 20. Austin Dillon, 726. 21. Paul Menard, 724. 22. Brian Vickers, 701. 23. Marcos Ambrose, 664. 24. Casey Mears, 614. 25. Martin Truex Jr., 610. Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 17 7 3 54 51 37 Los Angeles 14 5 9 51 57 30 Salt Lake 12 6 10 46 44 35 FC Dallas 13 9 6 45 48 37 Vancouver 8 7 13 37 36 36 Portland 8 8 12 36 49 48 Colorado 8 13 7 31 39 48 San Jose 6 11 10 28 33 39 Chivas USA 6 16 6 24 23 51 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. 14 9 5 47 42 31 Kansas City 13 10 6 45 43 34 New England13 12 3 42 41 39 New York 9 8 11 38 44 41 Columbus 9 9 10 37 40 36 Philadelphia 9 9 10 37 45 43 Toronto FC 9 11 7 34 36 43 Houston 9 13 5 32 33 50 Chicago 5 7 15 30 34 40 Montreal 5 17 6 21 32 52 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Friday's games Kansas City 4, Chivas USA 0 Seattle FC 3, Salt Lake 2 Saturday's games Philadelphia 2, New York 2, tie New England 2, Montreal 1 Chicago 1, Toronto FC 1, tie FC Dallas 2, Vancouver 1 Houston 2, Columbus 2, tie Colorado 2, Portland 2, tie Sunday's games San Jose 1, Los Angeles 1, tie Friday, Sept. 19 Colorado at Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Odds GLANTZ-CULVER LINE For Sept. 16 Major League Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog Washington -120/+110 at Atlanta at New York -150/+140 Miami Cincinnati -120/+110 at Chicago at St. Louis -150/+140 Milwaukee Los Angeles -135/+125 at Colorado San Francisco -135/+125 at Arizona at San Diego -135/+125 Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGUE at Baltimore -110/+100 Toronto at Tampa Bay -120/+110 New York Cleveland -180/+170 at Houston at Kansas City -230/+210 Chicago Detroit -145/+135 at Minnesota at Los Angeles -120/+110 Seattle at Oakland -230/+210 Texas INTERLEAGUE at Pittsburgh -165/+155 Boston NFL THURSDAY Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog at Atlanta 61/2 (45) Tampa Bay SUNDAY at Buffalo 1 (44) San Diego Dallas 1 (45) at St. Louis at Philadelphia 61/2 (50) Washington Houston 21/2 (42) at N.Y. Giants at New Orleans 91/2 (51) Minnesota at Cincinnati 7 (431/2) Tennessee at Cleveland Pk (411/2) Baltimore at Detroit 1 (52) Green Bay Indianapolis 61/2 (451/2)at Jacksonville at New England 15 (461/2) Oakland San Francisco 21/2 (43) at Arizona at Seattle 41/2 (481/2) Denver at Miami 41/2 (411/2) Kansas City at Carolina 31/2 (411/2) Pittsburgh MONDAY at N.Y. Jets 1 (451/2) Chicago MINORLEAGUEBASEBALL AAA Championship: 4p.m., NBCSN. MLB BASEBALL San Francisco Giants at Ari- zona Diamondbacks: 6:30p.m., CSNBA. Texas Rangers at Oakland Athletics: 7p.m., CSN. ON THE AIR | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 2 B

