Red Bluff Daily News

August 23, 2011

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2B Daily News – Tuesday, August 23, 2011 Fromm powers Georgia at LLWS 49ERS SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — Flashing a wide grin that revealed braces, Georgia's Jake Fromm clutched a baseball tight- ly in his left hand. It wasn't just a sou- venir from the Little League World Series, but the ball the 13-year- old slugger hit for a two- run homer in a three-run ninth that helped propel Warner Robins to a dra- matic 8-5 win Monday over LaGrange, Ky. ''I was just trying to put the ball in play,'' said the 5-foot-11 Fromm, Georgia's leader and tallest player. ''Hon- estly, I didn't think it was going to go over the wall.'' Did it ever. The high line-drive shot off a 2-1 pitch rock- eted over the green cen- ter-field fence 225 feet away. Pinch-runner Evan Lasseter scooted home with the go-ahead run on a passed ball earlier in Fromm's at-bat. Fromm, a pitcher, wasn't done. He returned to the mound in the bottom of the ninth to finish off Kentucky with two strikeouts and a groundout to help Geor- gia move on in the tour- nament. Fromm fanned 10 in 4 1-3 innings of one-hit relief. Earlier Monday, Lan- gley, British Columbia beat Kaoshiung, Taiwan, 5-3 to become the first Canadian team to beat a squad from Taiwan at the series following 16 straight losses; Hama- matsu City, Japan, beat Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, 13-4; and Oranjestad, Aruba, shut out Rapid City, S.D., 5-0 in a con- solation game. The nightcap turned into a central Pennsylva- nia party after the boys from Clinton County took control with a three-run first in a 10-0 blowout of Lafayette, La. The blue-clad Penn- sylvania players from the Keystone Little League live just about 30 miles away from South Williamsport. LITTLE LEAGUE World Series Monday's results Oranjestad, Aruba 5, Rapid City, S.D. 0, Rapid City eliminated Langley, British Columbia 5, Kaohsiung, Taiwan 3, Kaohsiung eliminated Warner Robins, Ga. 8, LaGrange, Ky. 5, 9 innings, LaGrange eliminated Hamamatsu City, Japan 13, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia 4, Dhahran eliminated Clinton County, Pa., 10, Lafayette, La. 0, 4 innings, Lafayette eliminated Today's games Consolation — Rotterdam, Netherlands vs. Cumberland, R.I., 10 a.m. Game 21 — Langley, British Columbia vs. Hamamatsu City, Japan , 1 p.m. Game 22 — Clinton County, Pa. vs.Warn- er Robins, Ga., 5 p.m. Wednesday's games Game 23 — Maracay, Venezuela vs.Mex- icali, Mexico, 1 p.m. Game 24 — Billings, Mont. vs. Huntington Beach, Calif., 5 p.m. Thursday's games Game 25 — Game 21 winner vs. Game 23 loser, 1 p.m. Game 26 — Game 22 winner vs. Game 24 loser, 5 p.m. Saturday's games International championship — Game 23 winner vs. Game 25 winner, 9 a.m. U.S. championship, Game 24 winner vs. Game 26 winner, Noon Sunday's games Third Place International runner-up vs. U.S. runner- up, 8 a.m. World Championship International champion vs. U.S. champi- on, Noon Another raucous, par- tisan crowd cheered their every move under the Lamade Stadium lights. Brandon Miller led off the bottom of the first with a homer to right to start the rout, and the squad nick- named the ''Big Blue Machine'' tacked on seven more runs in the second, more than enough support for starter Landon Breon. Miller came on in relief to get the last two outs, and he and Breon combined on a no-hitter. The game ended after Louisiana hit in the top of the fourth due to Lit- tle League's 10-run rule. ''Keystone! Key- stone,'' roared the Penn- sylvania fans after center fielder Tyler McCloskey caught the last out. Pennsylvania will play Georgia on Tuesday night. Manager Phillip John- son was hoping to save Fromm for that game, but called on him in relief with his team fac- ing another tight game. They had developed a penchant for rebounding from behind or late- game drama in the tour- nament run to South Williamsport. Fromm and his team- mates came through in the clutch again. ''We've always been put in tight situations,'' said leadoff hitter Logan Arnett, who was 3 for 5 with an RBI. ''It seems like whenever we need a big hit, it happens.'' Josh Goodman fin- ished 2 for 3, including the rally-starting, one- out single in the ninth before being lifted for pinch-runner Lasseter, while Fromm finished 2 for 4. Fromm said the bad back that had been both- ering him earlier in the tournament felt much better Monday. ''Strong batter ... looks like he's healed up MLB West Division Texas American League WL Pct GB Angels 69 59 .539 4.5 A's 74 55 .574 — 57 70 .449 16 Seattle 54 72 .429 18.5 East Division WL Pct GB New York 77 48 .616 — Boston 77 50 .606 1 Tampa Bay 69 57 .548 8.5 Toronto 65 62 .512 13 Baltimore 48 77 .384 29 Central Division WL Pct GB Detroit 69 58 .543 — Chicago 63 63 .500 5.5 Cleveland 62 62 .500 5.5 Minnesota 55 72 .433 14 Kansas City52 76 .406 17.5 —————————————————— Monday's results Baltimore 4, Minnesota 1 Detroit 5, Tampa Bay 2 Seattle 3, Cleveland 2 Texas 4, Boston 0 Today's games Oakland (McCarthy 6-6) at N.Y.Yankees (Colon 8-7), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (Beavan 3-4) at Cleveland (Masterson 10-7), 10:05 a.m. Seattle (Vasquez 0-0) at Cleveland (McAllister 0-0), 4:05 p.m., Kansas City (Chen 8-5) at Toronto (Morrow 9-7), 4:07 p.m. Detroit (Penny 8-9) at Tampa Bay (Price 11-10), 4:10 p.m. Boston (Lackey 11-9) at Texas (C.Lewis 11-8), 5:05 p.m. Baltimore (Simon 3-6) at Minnesota (Duensing 8-12), 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 10-6) at L.A. Angels (E.Santana 9-9), 7:05 p.m. Wednesday's games Oakland at N.Y.Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Seattle at Cleveland, 9:05 a.m. Boston at Texas, 4:05 p.m. Kansas City at Toronto, 4:07 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Baltimore at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Chicago at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. after that big hit,'' Ken- tucky manager Brad Bates said. Kentucky chipped away at Georgia's early 5-2 lead, tying the game at five in the fifth after Grant Larimore scored on an error. Griffin McLarty and Travis Faith homered for Ken- tucky. Faith also held Geor- gia scoreless for five innings in relief before tiring in the ninth. ''I don't want one pitch to define his per- formance ... because his performance was out- standing,'' Bates said. ——— Canada 5, Taiwan 3 Yi An Pan scattered nine hits over five innings and added a solo homer in the sixth for underdog Canada. It's already the most suc- cessful showing for Canada at the series since 2005. ''We've got two wins so far in this tournament. For a Canadian team, that's the most we've had in a while,'' coach Jason Andrews said. ''We are starting to get more comfortable with the crowds. The kids seem less nervous. I'm less nervous as coach.'' With the game tied, Connor McCreath scored the go-ahead run in the fourth after sin- gling. McCreath was sacrificed to second and later came around to score on an error. Taiwan had two chances to tie late but had a runner called out in the fourth for sliding head first into home, against Little League rules. Pan tagged a run- ner out at home to end the bottom of the fifth. ——— Aruba 5, South Dako- ta 0 Gillian Wernet struck out 12 in a four-hit MLB West Division National League WL Pct GB Arizona 69 59 .539 — GIANTS 68 60 .531 1 Colorado 61 68 .473 8.5 Padres 59 70 .457 10.5 Dodgers 58 69 .457 10.5 East Division WL Pct GB Philadelphia 82 44 .651 — Atlanta 77 52 .597 6.5 Washington 62 64 .492 20 New York 60 67 .472 22.5 Florida 57 70 .449 25.5 Central Division WL Pct GB Milwaukee 77 53 .592 — St. Louis 67 61 .523 9 Cincinnati 62 65 .488 13.5 Pittsburgh 60 67 .472 15.5 Chicago 56 72 .438 20 Houston 42 86 .328 34 —————————————————— Monday's results Atlanta 3, Chicago Cubs 0 Colorado 9, Houston 5 L.A. Dodgers 2, St. Louis 1 Milwaukee 8, Pittsburgh 1, 1st game Philadelphia 10, N.Y.Mets 0 Pittsburgh 9, Milwaukee 2, 2nd game Washington 4, Arizona 1 Today's games San Diego (Latos 6-12) at San Francisco (Cain 10-9), 7:15 p.m. Arizona (I.Kennedy 15-4) at Washington (Zimmermann 8-10), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 3-8) at Pittsburgh (Ohlendorf 0-0), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 11-10) at Philadelphia (Worley 8-1), 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 9-5) at Florida (Nolasco 9-9), 4:10 p.m. Atlanta (Minor 3-2) at Chicago (C.Coleman 2-5), 5:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 15-5) at St. Louis (Lohse 11-7), 5:15 p.m. Houston (Norris 6-8) at Colorado (White 0-0), 5:40 p.m. Wednesday's games San Diego at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 10:05 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m. Houston at Colorado, 12:10 p.m. Arizona at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Florida, 4:10 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. shutout as both teams ended their Little League run after being eliminated earlier in the weekend from title con- tention. Aruba's ace also had a nice day at the plate, going 2 for 3 with a run. Brett Beyer had two hits to lead South Dakota. The Midwest region champs will still remem- ber their postseason run for a long time. They've become Little League social media celebrities, too. ''I have a lot of Face- book requests,'' first baseman Zach Solano said, ''from people I don't even know.'' ———— Japan 13, Saudi Ara- bia 4 Japan broke open a tight game with an eight- run sixth inning, setting up a matchup with Cana- da on Tuesday. With Japan clinging to a one- run lead, Sotaro Yoshida hit a solo homer with one out to start the scor- ing in the sixth. Mitsuhi- ro Uchida, Ken Igeta and Iwamoto each added RBI hits in the inning. Japan manager Akihi- ro Suzuki said his team may have still been thinking about the tough one-run loss to Mexico on Sunday. ''We had a meeting after last game about getting back to playing our kind of baseball,'' Suzuki said through translator Masato Hori. ''Our minds were not in the game early on because of the loss last night. We were lucky to bounce back.'' Saudi Arabia rallied from a 3-0 deficit with four runs in the bottom of the second to take the lead. Brandon Carswell and Jordan Hajazin each had RBI doubles in the inning. NASCAR Sprint Cup Points Leaders 1. Kyle Busch 2. Jimmie Johnson 3. Kevin Harvick 4. Carl Edwards 5. Matt Kenseth 6. Jeff Gordon 7. Ryan Newman 8. Kurt Busch 9. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 10. Tony Stewart 11. Clint Bowyer 12. Brad Keselowski 13. Greg Biffle 14. Denny Hamlin 15. A J Allmendinger 16. Mark Martin 17. Kasey Kahne 18. Paul Menard 19. Joey Logano 20. David Ragan 21. Martin Truex Jr. 799 789 760 760 759 739 725 722 700 694 670 642 636 635 632 627 623 617 610 604 602 22. Juan Pablo Montoya 596 23. Marcos Ambrose 24. Jeff Burton 25. Regan Smith 26. David Reutimann 27. Jamie McMurray 28. Brian Vickers 29. Bobby Labonte 30. David Gilliland 31. Casey Mears 32. Dave Blaney 33. Andy Lally 34. Robby Gordon 35. Tony Raines 36. Bill Elliott 37. Ken Schrader 38. Terry Labonte 39. J.J.Yeley 40. Michael McDowell 41. Boris Said 42. David Stremme 43. Michael Waltrip 44. Andy Pilgrim 45. Chris Cook 46. T.J. Bell 47. Brian Simo 48. Geoffrey Bodine 49. Brian Keselowski 50. Erik Darnell 593 543 526 517 511 503 500 402 323 314 287 223 129 100 87 81 81 78 38 37 20 18 17 14 11 6 3 2 Upcoming Schedule Aug. 27 — Irwin Tools Night Race, Bristol, Tenn. Sep. 4 — AdvoCare 500, Hampton, Ga. Sep. 10 — Wonderful Pistachios 400, Richmond, Va. Sep. 18 — GEICO 400, Joliet, Ill. (Continued from page 1B) stadium operations and secu- rity. ''Don't come here. You're not welcome.'' Earlier Monday, Lee said he was horrified as he watched violent fan con- frontations at the game. Lee attended Saturday's game with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan, and both witnessed the brawling firsthand as spectators. ''They were just constant- ly wailing at each other with- out regard to who was there,'' Lee said of the fans. ''This is a family outing, for residents and visitors and people who want to see the game, not for people to look for people they don't like, then saying bad words, then getting into it.'' Two men who were ini- tially listed as seriously injured in the violence were upgraded to fair condition on Monday. One of the victims, a 24-year-old man who reportedly was wearing a T- shirt reading ''F--- the Nin- ers,'' was shot several times in the stomach. Police said he managed to make it to sta- dium security for help despite the injuries. The other victim is a 26- year-old man who was beat- en unconscious in an upper level stadium restroom dur- ing the fourth quarter. Another shooting victim was treated after receiving superficial facial wounds after the game. Police did not release the name of any victims. No arrests have been made. Police were seeking motives in the shootings, GOLF 1. Luke Donald World Golf Ranking ENG 10.17 2. Lee Westwood ENG 8.30 3. Steve Stricker USA 6.93 4. Martin Kaymer GER 6.86 5. Rory McIlroy NIR 6.81 6. Phil Mickelson USA 5.86 7. Adam Scott 8. Jason Day AUS 5.86 AUS 5.56 9. Dustin Johnson USA 5.47 10. Nick Watney USA 5.33 11. Charl Schwartzel SAF 5.21 12. Matt Kuchar USA 5.16 13. Graeme McDowell NIR 14. K.J. Choi 4.85 15. Bubba Watson USA 4.69 16. David Toms 17. Ian Poulter ENG 4.11 18. Paul Casey ENG 4.09 19. Robert Karlsson SWE 3.99 20. Kim Kyung-Tae KOR 3.83 TENNIS 1. Novak Djokovic 2. Rafael Nadal 3. Roger Federer 4. Andy Murray 5. David Ferrer ATP Money Leaders $8,063,518 6. Robin Soderling $5,269,089 $2,534,199 $2,520,664 $1,746,375 $1,323,473 7. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga $1,165,383 8. Nicolas Almagro 9. Mardy Fish $1,127,616 $1,091,026 10. Tomas Berdych $1,044,089 WTA Money Leaders 1. Petra Kvitova 2. Li Na $3,230,434 $3,199,263 3. Maria Sharapova $2,683,975 4. Victoria Azarenka $2,525,784 5. Kim Clijsters $2,325,741 6. Caroline Wozniacki $2,203,029 7. Francesca Schiavone $1,380,726 8. Marion Bartoli 9.Vera Zvonareva 10. Andrea Petkovic $1,374,683 $1,230,091 $987,419 NFL PRESEASON Monday's result N.Y. Giants 41, Chicago 13 Thursday's games Carolina at Cincinnati, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 5 p.m. Friday's games Green Bay at Indianapolis, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Kansas City, 5 p.m. Saturday's games Houston at San Francisco, 5 p.m. Jacksonville at Buffalo, 4 p.m. N.Y. Jets at N.Y. Giants, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m. Miami at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at Tennessee, 5 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 5 p.m. New England at Detroit, 5 p.m. Seattle at Denver, 6 p.m. San Diego at Arizona, 7 p.m. Sunday's game New Orleans at Oakland, 5 p.m. Today's Burning Issue Doesn't The Lint Trap Keep The Dryer Vent Clean? (No!) A partially plugged gas dryer vent may back carbon monoxide into your home. Symptoms may include headache, achiness, nau- sea, brain damage and death. Lint is flammable. Longer cycles are a waste of energy. We test the sys- tem before and after service so you know what we accomplished. Free dryer vent check (with other service) Limited Time! 527-3331 "My dryer vent was completely plugged up. Now it dries the clothes in one cycle." Mrs. M Greenberg, Redding www.flueseason.com THE Chimney Professionals Chimney Sweeps 527 3331 Flue Season KOR 4.75 USA 4.17 including whether the attacks were influenced by emotions involving the annual Battle of the Bay exhibition or possibly gang connections. Police said officers eject- ed at least 70 people from the stadium on Saturday, com- pared to about 20 at other games. The figure from Saturday did not include several dozen people ejected by team secu- rity, Mercurio said. There were 90 calls for medical service that day, a figure far higher than at a typical Niners home game, officials said. Police Chief Greg Suhr, a lifelong San Franciscan, called it an ''aberration.'' Star running back Frank Gore said at 49ers headquar- ters that he was shocked to see so much violence. ''I think some of the fans take it too serious,'' Gore said. ''It's a football game." WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE WL Pct GB x-Minnesota20 6 .769 — Phoenix 15 10 .600 4.5 Seattle 14 12 .538 6 San Antonio13 12 .520 6.5 Sparks 11 15 .423 9 Tulsa 1 23 .042 18 EASTERN CONFERENCE WL Pct GB Indiana 19 8 .704 — Connecticut 17 10 .630 2 New York 15 12 .556 4 Atlanta 13 13 .500 5.5 Chicago 12 14 .462 6.5 Washington 5 20 .200 13 x-clinched playoff spot —————————————————— Today's games Los Angeles at Washington, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Tulsa, 5 p.m. New York at Phoenix, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Seattle, 7 p.m. RODEO Pro Rodeo Leaders All-around 1.Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas 2.Shane Proctor, Grand Coulee, Wash.$92,414 3.Bobby Mote, Culver, Ore. 4.Josh Peek, Pueblo, Colo. 5.Steven Dent, Mullen, Neb. $67,884 $67,130 6.Ryan Jarrett, Comanche, Okla. $60,409 7.Cody Ohl, Hico, Texas 8.Rhen Richard, Roosevelt, Utah Bareback Riding 1.Will Lowe, Canyon, Texas 2.Kaycee Feild, Payson, Utah 3.Tilden Hooper, Carthage, Texas 4.Bobby Mote, Culver, Ore. $96,604 $91,411 $83,130 $69,367 5. Steven Peebles, Redmond, Ore. $66,796 6.Clint Cannon, Waller, Texas 7.Matt Bright, Azle, Texas 8.Royce Ford, Briggsdale, Colo. $59,186 9.Cody DeMers, Kimberly, Idaho 10.Brian Bain, Culver, Ore. Steer Wrestling 1.Luke Branquinho, Los Alamos 2.Billy Bugenig, Ferndale $82,308 $72,177 3.Trevor Knowles, Mount Vernon, Ore. $69,998 4.Olin Hannum, Malad, Idaho 5.Sean Mulligan, Coleman, Okla. $62,942 6.Dean Gorsuch, Gering, Neb. 7.Todd Suhn, Hermosa, S.D. 8.Casey Martin, Sulphur, La. Team Roping (header) 1.Chad Masters, Clarksville, Tenn. $82,695 2.Clay Tryan, Billings, Mont. $73,933 3.Derrick Begay, Seba Dalkai, Ariz. $67,560 4.Erich Rogers, Round Rock, Ariz. $66,015 5.Luke Brown, Stephenville, Texas 6.Spencer Mitchell, Colusa 7.Kaleb Driggers, Albany, Ga. 8.Colby Lovell, Madisonville, Texas Team Roping (heeler) 1.Jade Corkill, Fallon, Nev. 2.Travis Graves, Jay, Okla. 3.Cory Petska, Marana, Ariz. 4.Kory Koontz, Sudan, Texas $85,659 $75,933 $69,533 $68,849 5.Cesar de la Cruz, Tucson, Ariz. $67,560 6.Martin Lucero, Stephenville, Texas $65,206 7.Broc Cresta, Santa Rosa 8.Brad Culpepper, Poulan, Ga. 9.Jhett Johnson, Casper, Wyo. 10.Walt Woodard, Stephenville, Texas $60,128 Saddle Bronc Riding 1.Cody Wright, Milford, Utah 2.Taos Muncy, Corona, N.M. $110,456 $102,472 3.Bradley Harter, Weatherford, Texas $75,868 4.Heith DeMoss, Heflin, La. 5.Wade Sundell, Boxholm, Iowa 8.Jacobs Crawley, College Station, Texas $50,091 9.Cody DeMoss, Heflin, La. 10.Chad Ferley, Oelrichs, S.D. Tie-down Roping 1.Tuf Cooper, Decatur, Texas 2.Clint Cooper, Decatur, Texas 3.Hunter Herrin, Apache, Okla. 4.Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas 5.Timber Moore, Aubrey, Texas 6.Tyson Durfey, Colbert, Wash. $91,649 $78,853 $77,687 $73,432 $70,344 $68,775 7.Cory Solomon, Prairie View, Texas $66,391 8.Shane Hanchey, Sulphur, La. $57,724 9.Adam Gray, Seymour, Texas 10.Cody Ohl, Hico, Texas Steer Roping 1.Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas 2.Vin Fisher Jr., Andrews, Texas 3.Rocky Patterson, Pratt, Kan. 4.Cody Lee, Gatesville, Texas 5.Bryce Davis, Abilene, Texas $74,512 $61,360 $56,311 $50,172 $35,557 6.Scott Snedecor, Fredricksburg, Texas $33,591 7.Ralph Williams, Skiatook, Okla. $29,454 8.Mike Chase, McAlester, Okla. $28,850 9.Kim Ziegelgruber, Edmond, Okla. $28,771 10.Will Gasperson, Decatur, Texas $26,780 Bull Riding 1.Shane Proctor, Grand Coulee, Wash.$127,096 2.J.W.Harris, Mullin, Texas 3.Trevor Kastner, Ardmore, Okla. $75,072 4.Clayton Foltyn, El Campo, Texas 5.Wesley Silcox, Santaquin, Utah $93,143 $70,311 6.Jacob O'Mara, Prairieville, La. $64,029 7.L.J.Jenkins, Porum, Okla. 8. Clayton Savage, Cheyenne, Wyo. $63,099 9.Cody Whitney, Asher, Okla. 10.Travis Atkinson, Lehi, Utah Barrel Racing 1.Brittany Pozzi, Victoria, Texas $111,839 2.Lindsay Sears, Nanton, Alberta $88,694 3.Brenda Mays, Terrebonne, Ore. $86,389 4.Sherry Cervi, Marana, Ariz. 5.Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs, S.D. $80,556 $76,862 6.Carlee Pierce, Woodward, Okla. $76,776 7.Jody Sheffield, South Weber, Utah $62,284 8.Christina Richman, Glendora, Calif. $59,881 9.Jill Moody, Letcher, S.D. 10.Sue Smith, Blackfoot, Idaho $58,188 $53,261 $68,171 $63,368 $59,300 $58,825 $57,275 $56,445 $61,659 $56,145 6.Jesse Bail, Camp Crook, S.D. $52,639 7.Jesse Wright, Milford, Utah $51,580 $45,154 $44,554 $64,227 $64,073 $61,301 $65,206 $64,227 $64,073 $63,501 9.Jake Barnes, Scottsdale, Ariz. $61,669 10.Turtle Powell, Stephenville, Texas $59,596 $65,555 $58,906 $54,999 $52,376 9.Jake Rinehart, Highmore, S.D. $49,489 10.Shawn Greenfield, Lakeview, Ore.$47,752 $58,825 $56,830 $65,399 $62,011 $60,169 $55,587 9.Jim Ross Cooper, Monument, N.M.$53,964 10.Russell Cardoza, Terrebonne, Ore.$48,220 $203,695 $86,353

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