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COLLEGEBASKETBALL SEC/Big 12Challenge Texas vs. Kentucky:4p.m.,ESPN. SEC/Big 12Challenge Florida vs. Kansas: 6p.m., ESPN. SEC/Big 12Challenge Mis- souri vs. Oklahoma: 6:30p.m., ESPNU. NBA BASKETBALL Indiana Pacers at Sacramen- to Kings: 7p.m., CSN. COLLEGE FOOTBALL MAC Championship N. Illinois vs. Bowling Green: 4p.m., ESPN2. Pac-12Championship Arizona vs. Oregon: 6p.m., FOX. GOLF PGA Hero World Challenge Round 2: 11a.m., GOLF. EPGA Nedbank Challenge Round 3: midnight, GOLF. COLLEGE HOCKEY Boston College vs. New Hampshire: 5p.m., NBCSN. SOCCER NCAA College Cup Virginia vs. Texas A&M Women's Semifi- nal: 2p.m., ESPNU. NCAA College Cup Florida State vs. Stanford Women's Semifinal: 4:30p.m., ESPNU. EPL Chelsea at Newcastle U.: 4:45a.m., NBCSN. Ontheair By Janie McCauley TheAssociatedPress SANTA CLARA Offensive coordinator Greg Roman has moved on from a crit- ical Twitter post last week by the daughter of his boss, 49ers general manager Trent Baalke. After a 19-3 loss to the Seahawks last Thursday night, Cassie Baalke called for Roman to be gone be- fore quickly deleting her tweet and later shutting down her account alto- gether. "Greg Roman can take a hike..the 49ers don't want you no more," the tweet read. After her words were icons of hands clapping. Trent Baalke said last Friday that both he and his daughter had apologized to Roman, who noted Thurs- day he had moved on and was prepared to get the of- fense back on track Sunday at Oakland after one of its worst performances. "It was very concise, very clear," Roman said of the interaction with the Baal- kes. "I have children, I un- derstand. We talked about it briefly and it's over. Pe- riod. Really not an issue. ... I didn't really react in an emotional manner, just kind of a matter-of-fact matter. I understand these kind of things do happen, and we talked about it, cleared it up and it's over." "Certainly didn't play the way we wanted to play the last game. Guys came in and took a hard look at it and rolled up their sleeves and got back to work. We've got to go get this win. It's that time of year, and it's that kind of game." Roman has coach Jim Harbaugh's support and the coach said Roman will still be calling the plays Sunday as the 49ers (7-5) look to win their four re- maining games and re- turn to the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year fol- lowing three straight trips to the NFC championship game. Quarterback Colin Kae- pernick went 16 for 29 for 121 yards with two inter- ceptions and four sacks in one of his worst outings as a pro and the 49ers were outgained 379-164. Kaepe- rnick's 36.7 passer rating was the second lowest of his career behind a Week 2 defeat at Seattle in Sep- tember 2013. "We've got a resilient group and we've got a group with a lot of pride. We've got a lot of high-qual- ity, high-character individ- uals," Roman said. "Take out the football part of it. We've got guys that I want to be in a trench with. And, when you go out and you have that kind of perfor- mance you've got to eval- uate it, look at it and we've got guys that are their own harshest critics as well. So, I think we're dealing from the high ground there." Fullback Bruce Miller said this week that de- fenses might be catch- ing on to San Francisco's shifts on an offense that is "maybe even being a little bit repetitive, giving the same looks." "I don't think new things need to be introduced. We've done a lot of things well this year," Miller said. "I definitely think being more consistent, week in and week out, no matter what the look is, no mat- ter what the play is. I def- initely think that there's been some breakdowns, whether it's been block- ing, protections. When you have 11 guys counting on each other and you have a breakdown, whether it's just one guy each play, it causes negative plays." NFL 49ers OC Roman moving forward from criticism Tweet from GM's daughter 'really not an issue' linebacker (Paradise); Ryan Steindorf, linebacker (Pleasant Valley); Nick Ar- ingo, linebacker (Shasta); Justin Abney, deep back (Enterprise); Baylee Han- son, deep back (Paradise) and Noah Furgeson, deep back (Shasta). Senior down linemen Andrew Fisher (Enter- prise). Wyatt Wycoff (Paradise) and Andrew Jenson (Pleasant Valley) received honorable men- tions. Junior Chico down lineman Nick Maximov and Foothill junior deep back Ray Arreola also re- ceived an honorable men- tion. All-EAL FROM PAGE 1 times, but he's so explo- sive," Rollins said. "When he explodes it's unbeliev- able to watch." A surprise for Roll- ins this year might be the emergence of Nicholas Maximov. The Chico junior and 182-pounder won his season-opener over Zack Pritchard with an 8-3 de- cision. "Nick Maximov might be a state placer," Rollins said. Corning got it under 20 points once following its third middleweight victory, when Josh Shults squeaked out an 8-7 decision on Kur- tis Clem. The Corning se- nior and 152-pounder had a 4-2 lead after two peri- ods, but then needed a late two-point reversal to overtake Clem for good. It was the third decision for Corning, with the other two coming from Devon Hiller's late rally, in which he connected on a reversal and take down with less than a minute left in the third, for a 7-3 win in the 132-pound bout. Then at 145s, Jacob Tubbs got Corn- ing's fan base excited with a 3-2 win on Chico fresh- man Jake Farrell. Ultimately, Chico was too devastating down the stretch, led by Leal, Max- imov and David Leyva's pin in just 45 seconds over 160-pounder Zack Daniel- son. The Panthers resume ac- tion Friday at the two-day Newark Rotary Duals. "I'm hoping to go 5-0 and win that tourna- ment," Rollins said. "Last year we made it to the fi- nals and lost to a team (out of) Fresno. I think we can win it this year, I love to see this team go unde- feated." Chico High wrestling will livestream each home match this year on its Face- book page. Wrestling FROM PAGE 1 against Indiana and 34-0 to Georgia), so it's doubt- ful it will forgive Alabama for losing to the Tigers and allow the Crimson Tide to back into the field. If the Tigers pull an upset, the SEC is going to need a lot of help. The Crimson Tide is favored by 14.5. Arizona beats Oregon? The Wildcats are sev- enth in the rankings, head- ing into a rematch with Or- egon today. Two wins away from home against the Ducks would be like hold- ing a pair of aces: tough to beat. It could come down to a resume contest be- tween Baylor and/or Ohio State and Arizona. Don't bet against the Wildcats making the big jump. The Pac-12 and commissioner Larry Scott are touting their championship as a playoff play-in game. They might be right. Despite los- ing the first game, Oregon is favored by 14.5. Georgia Tech beats Flor- ida State? Considering the fourth- place and unbeaten Semi- noles have been dropping when they win, there's no doubt they'd be done with a loss. Georgia Tech is 11th and beating Florida State would mean finishing the season with three straight wins against ranked teams. The Yellow Jackets would probably need Bay- lor (vs. Kansas State) and Ohio State (vs. Wisconsin) to lose to reach the top four, but considering who those teams are playing, that doesn't seem like such a stretch. Florida State is favored by 4. TCU struggles to beat Iowa State? The Horned Frogs got a pass for squeaking by at Kansas last month. That can't happen again against a 30-point under- dog at home. If it does, it would open the door for either Baylor or Ohio State to replace the Frogs in the top four. With the Bears and Buckeyes in position to add marquee wins to their resumes, the third-ranked Horned Frogs better exert some serious game control against the Cyclones. Three of the top four teams lose? Assuming it won't be TCU, the Big 12 would be looking good to get two teams in the field. TCU, Baylor, Ohio State and Ar- izona sounds about right in this scenario. If Bay- lor were to lose to K-State, the ninth-ranked Wildcats could become a viable op- tion, though that scenario probably allows Georgia Tech to squeeze through. Alabama, Ohio State and Baylor lose? This is how Missouri could get in. Assuming Arizona and Georgia Tech also lose, the final spot with Florida State, TCU and Oregon comes down to Missouri, Kansas State and Wisconsin. Michigan State (eighth) and Missis- sippi State (10th) would likely come back into the conversation, but neither would have the conference championship that those other three would have on their resumes. And what team would have a bet- ter win than Missouri if it takes down the commit- tee's No. 1 team on a neu- tral field? The top six teams all lose? Long and his crew might have to pull an all-nighter. The questions with this doomsday scenario are: Could it allow Alabama to back in? Would Missis- sippi State and/or Michi- gan State get in? And how bad will the TV ratings be for a final four of Ari- zona, Georgia Tech, Kan- sas State and Wisconsin or Missouri? College FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL AMERICANCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 9 3 0 .750 361 276 San Diego 8 4 0 .667 279 249 Kansas City 7 5 0 .583 277 224 Oakland 1 11 0 .083 176 337 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 9 3 0 .750 378 253 Miami 7 5 0 .583 301 232 Buffalo 7 5 0 .583 264 217 N.Y. Jets 2 10 0 .167 190 319 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 8 4 0 .667 382 283 Houston 6 6 0 .500 287 247 Tennessee 2 10 0 .167 213 338 Jacksonville 2 10 0 .167 186 329 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 8 3 1 .708 260 247 Baltimore 7 5 0 .583 328 242 Pittsburgh 7 5 0 .583 320 298 Cleveland 7 5 0 .583 252 245 NATIONALCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 9 3 0 .750 258 224 Seattle 8 4 0 .667 298 221 San Francisco7 5 0 .583 231 244 St. Louis 5 7 0 .417 261 285 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 9 3 0 .750 375 285 Dallas 9 4 0 .692 343 301 N.Y. Giants 3 9 0 .250 257 319 Washington 3 9 0 .250 244 322 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 5 7 0 .417 291 299 New Orleans 5 7 0 .417 323 318 Carolina 3 8 1 .292 228 331 Tampa Bay 2 10 0 .167 220 314 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 9 3 0 .750 380 267 Detroit 8 4 0 .667 231 207 Minnesota 5 7 0 .417 233 257 Chicago 5 8 0 .385 281 378 Thursday'sgame Dallas 41, Chicago 28 Sunday,Dec.7 N.Y. Giants at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Carolina at New Orleans, 10 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Washington, 10 a.m. Baltimore at Miami, 10 a.m. Indianapolis at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 10 a.m. Houston at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Denver, 1:05 p.m. Kansas City at Arizona, 1:05 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland, 1:25 p.m. Seattle at Philadelphia, 1:25 p.m. New England at San Diego, 5:30 p.m. Monday,Dec.8 Atlanta at Green Bay, 5:30 p.m. Cowboys41,Bears28 Dallas 0 14 21 6 — 41 Chicago 0 7 0 21 — 28 Secondquarter Dal— Murray 1 run (Bailey kick), 10:50. Chi— Bennett 12 pass from Cutler (Feely kick), 6:13. Dal— Beasley 13 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), :08. Thirdquarter Dal— Beasley 24 pass from Romo (Bai- ley kick), 12:32. Dal— Escobar 6 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 8:02. Dal— Randle 17 run (Bailey kick), 2:09. Fourthquarter Chi— Jeffery 27 pass from Cutler (kick blocked), 14:52. Dal— FG Bailey 35, 12:35. Chi— Forte 1 run (Forte run), 7:17. Chi— Cutler 10 run (Feely kick), 6:09. Dal— FG Bailey 27, 3:41. A— 61,558. Dal Chi First downs 21 23 Total net yards 397 376 Rushes yds 35-194 15-35 Passing 203 341 Punt returns 1-1 1-4 Kickoff returns 2-23 6-145 Int ret 1-0 0-0 Comp-att-int 21-26-0 32-46-1 Sacked yds lost 1-2 0-0 Punts 2-37.5 4-33.5 Fumbles lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties yds 8-97 9-54 Time of poss. 32:28 27:32 INDIVIDUALSTATS Rushing— Dallas, Murray 32-179, Randle 1-17, Romo 2-(minus 2). Chicago, Forte 13-26, Cutler 2-9. Passing— Dallas, Romo 21-26-0-205. Chicago, Cutler 32-46-1-341. Receiving— Dallas, Murray 9-49, Bryant 6-82, Beasley 3-42, Witten 2-26, Escobar 1-6. Chicago, Bennett 12-84, Forte 8-74, Jeffery 6-95, Marshall 3-61, Wilson 2-19, Morgan 1-8. Missedfieldgoals— None. COLLEGEFOOTBALLPLAYOFF RANKINGS Record 1. Alabama 11-1 2. Oregon 11-1 3. TCU 10-1 4. Florida St. 12-0 5. Ohio St. 11-1 6. Baylor 10-1 7. Arizona 10-2 8. Michigan St. 10-2 9. Kansas St. 9-2 10. Mississippi St. 10-2 11. Georgia Tech 10-2 12. Mississippi 9-3 13. Wisconsin 10-2 14. Georgia 9-3 15. UCLA 9-3 16. Missouri 10-2 17. Arizona St. 9-3 18. Clemson 9-3 19. Auburn 8-4 20. Oklahoma 8-3 21. Louisville 9-3 22. Boise St. 10-2 23. Utah 8-4 24. LSU 8-4 25. Southern Cal 8-4 The College Football Playoff Selection Committee will issue weekly rankings each Tuesday, with the final rankings being announced Sunday, Dec. 7. The playoff semifinals will match the No. 1 seed vs. the No. 4 seed, and No. 2 will face No. 3. The semifinals will be hosted at the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1, 2015. The championship game will be on Jan. 12, 2015 at Arlington, Texas. APTOP-25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first- place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 29, 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. Alabama (25) 11-1 1,426 2 2. Florida St. (29) 12-0 1,423 1 3. Oregon (5) 11-1 1,391 3 4. TCU 10-1 1,274 6 5. Baylor 10-1 1,243 5 6. Ohio St. 11-1 1,192 7 7. Michigan St. 10-2 1,048 10 8. Arizona 10-2 1,027 12 9. Kansas St. 9-2 995 11 10. Mississippi St. 10-2 944 4 11. Wisconsin 10-2 910 14 12. Georgia Tech 10-2 823 16 13. Mississippi 9-3 753 18 14. Missouri 10-2 740 17 15. Georgia 9-3 06 8 16. UCLA 9-3 512 9 17. Arizona St. 9-3 495 13 18. Oklahoma 8-3 485 20 19. Clemson 9-3 418 23 20. Auburn 8-4 358 15 21. Louisville 9-3 346 24 22. Boise St. 10-2 265 25 23. LSU 8-4 145 NR 24. Utah 8-4 79 NR 25. Nebraska 9-3 64 NR Othersreceivingvotes: Southern Cal 61, Minnesota 47, Duke 22, Marshall 22, Memphis 21, Colorado St. 18, Air Force 7, Stanford 4, West Virginia 4, N. Illinois 3, UCF 3, Cincinnati 1. Basketball NBA WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 15 2 .882 — Clippers 13 5 .722 2½ Phoenix 11 8 .579 5 Sacramento 9 9 .500 6½ Lakers 5 14 .263 11 SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 15 3 .833 — Houston 14 4 .778 1 Dallas 15 5 .750 1 San Antonio 13 5 .722 2 New Orleans 8 8 .500 6 NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 14 4 .778 — Denver 9 9 .500 5 Okl ah oma C it y 5 13 . 27 8 9 Utah 5 14 .263 9½ Minnesota 4 13 .235 9½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 15 4 .789 — Brooklyn 8 9 .471 6 Boston 5 11 .313 8½ New York 4 16 .200 11½ Philadelphia 1 17 .056 13½ SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Washington 12 5 .706 — Atlanta 11 6 .647 1 Miami 9 9 .500 3½ Orlando 7 14 .333 7 Charlotte 4 15 .211 9 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Chicago 12 7 .632 — Cleveland 10 7 .588 1 Milwaukee 10 10 .500 2½ Indiana 7 11 .389 4½ Detroit 3 16 .158 9 Wednesday'sgames Washington 111, Lakers 95 Ch ic ag o 1 02 , C ha rl ot t e 9 5 Atlanta 112, Miami 102 Boston 109, Detroit 102, OT Brooklyn 95, San Antonio 93, OT Houston 105, Memphis 96 Dallas 107, Milwaukee 105 Philadelphia 85, Minnesota 77 Toronto 123, Utah 104 Clippers 114, Orlando 86 Thursday'sgames Cleveland 90, New York 87 Indiana at Portland, (n.) New Orleans at Golden State, (n.) Friday'sgames Oklahoma City at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Denver at Washington, 4 p.m. New York at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Lakers at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Atlanta at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. San Antonio at Memphis, 5 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Phoenix at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Miami at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Orlando at Utah, 6 p.m. Indiana at Sacramento, 7 p.m. NCAAMEN'STOP-25 Thursday 1. Kentucky (7-0) did not play. 2. Wisconsin (7-1) did not play. 3. Arizona (7-0) did not play. 4. Duke (8-0) did not play. 5. Louisville (6-0) did not play. 6. Texas (7-0) did not play. 7. Virginia (8-0) did not play. 8. Wichita State (4-1) did not play. 9. Gonzaga (7-0) did not play. 10. Villanova (7-0) did not play. 11. Kansas (5-1) did not play. 12. North Carolina (5-2) did not play. 13. San Diego State (5-1) vs. San Diego, (n.) 14. Ohio State (5-1) did not play. 15. Miami (8-0) did not play. 16. West Virginia (7-1) lost to LSU 74-73. 17. Michigan (6-1) did not play. 18. Arkansas (6-1) lost to No. 20 Iowa State 95-77. 19. Michigan State (5-3) did not play. 20. Iowa State (5-1) beat No. 18 Arkansas 95-77. 21. Maryland (7-1) did not play. 22. Oklahoma (4-2) did not play. 23. Butler (6-1) did not play. 24. Illinois (6-1) did not play. 25. Utah (6-1) did not play. NCAAWOMEN'STOP-25 Thursday 1. South Carolina (7-0) beat Charlotte 82-61. 2. Notre Dame (8-0) did not play. 3. UConn (5-1) did not play. 4. Texas (6-0) did not play. 5. Texas A&M (8-0) did not play. 6. North Carolina (8-0) beat No. 18 Rutgers 96-93, OT. 7. Louisville (8-0) beat No. 22 Iowa 86-52. 8. Stanford (5-2) did not play. 9. Duke (5-2) did not play. 10. California (7-0) did not play. 11. Baylor (5-1) did not play. 12. Nebraska (7-0) did not play. 13. Kentucky (7-1) did not play. 14. Tennessee (5-2) did not play. 15. Maryland (6-2) did not play. 16. Michigan State (5-1) beat Georgia Tech 79-73. 17. Oregon State (6-0) beat Idaho 75-53. 18. Rutgers (6-1) lost to No. 6 North Carolina 96-93, OT. 19. Georgia (9-0) beat Mercer 68-49. 20. Oklahoma State (6-1) did not play. 21. Syracuse (6-1) beat Penn State 61-39. 22. Iowa (6-2) lost to No. 7 Louisville 86-52. 23. Mississippi State (7-0) did not play. 24. West Virginia (5-1) did not play. 25. Arkansas (6-1) lost to South Dakota State 80-75, OT. 25. DePaul (5-2) did not play. NCAAWOMEN'SFARWEST Boise St. 86, Idaho St. 62 Oregon St. 75, Idaho 53 Saint Mary's (Cal) 73, CS Northridge 63 Washington St. 81, UC Santa Barbara 55 Wyoming 60, Montana 54 Golf HEROWORLDCHALLENGE Thursday At Isleworth Golf and Country Club Windermere, Fla. Purse: $3.5 million Yardage: 7,354;Par: 72 (36-36) FirstRound Jordan Spieth........................... 31-35—66 -6 Zach Johnson........................... 37-30—67 -5 Steve Stricker ..........................34-33—67 -5 Rickie Fowler ........................... 36-31—67 -5 Henrik Stenson........................34-33—67 -5 Graeme McDowell ..................34-34—68 -4 Hideki Matsuyama..................36-32—68 -4 Jimmy Walker ..........................34-34—68 -4 Matt Kuchar..............................37-32—69 -3 Bubba Watson......................... 34-35—69 -3 Chris Kirk...................................37-33—70 -2 Hunter Mahan...........................37-34—71 -1 Jason Day ..................................37-34—71 -1 Keegan Bradley.........................34-38—72 E Justin Rose .................................38-34—72 E Billy Horschel.......................... 38-35—73 +1 Patrick Reed.............................36-37—73 +1 Tiger Woods............................ 41-36—77 +5 NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 26 18 7 1 37 82 69 Anaheim 27 16 6 5 37 76 72 Calgary 26 16 8 2 34 83 66 Los Angeles 25 13 7 5 31 67 57 San Jose 26 12 10 4 28 70 71 Arizona 26 10 13 3 23 64 81 Edmonton 26 6 15 5 17 58 90 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 25 17 6 2 36 69 51 St. Louis 26 16 8 2 34 70 59 Chicago 25 16 8 1 33 78 49 Winnipeg 26 13 9 4 30 55 58 Minnesota 24 14 9 1 29 67 56 Colorado 25 9 11 5 23 67 79 Dallas 26 9 12 5 23 75 94 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 27 18 6 3 39 97 69 Montreal 27 17 8 2 36 70 68 Detroit 26 15 6 5 35 82 67 Toronto 25 13 9 3 29 84 77 Boston 26 14 11 1 29 63 63 Florida 24 10 7 7 27 53 62 Ottawa 25 10 10 5 25 64 68 Buffalo 26 9 15 2 20 45 82 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 26 19 7 0 38 82 68 Pittsburgh 25 17 6 2 36 82 58 N.Y. Rangers 24 11 9 4 26 71 70 Washington 25 11 10 4 26 70 70 New Jersey 26 10 12 4 24 63 75 Philadelphia 25 8 13 4 20 66 81 Carolina 25 8 14 3 19 57 71 Columbus 25 8 15 2 18 58 87 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday'sgames Anaheim 5, Philadelphia 4, SO Minnesota 2, Montreal 1 Chicago 4, St. Louis 1 Winnipeg 3, Edmonton 2, OT Thursday'sgames Columbus 4, Florida 3, SO Vancouver 3, Pittsburgh 0 Washington 2, Carolina 1 New Jersey 5, Toronto 3 N.Y. Islanders 2, Ottawa 1 Detroit 5, Dallas 2 Tampa Bay 5, Buffalo 0 Nashville 4, St. Louis 3 Los Angeles 4, Arizona 0 Colorado at Calgary, (n.) Boston at San Jose, (n.) Friday'sgames Anaheim at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Colorado at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Montreal at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Soccer MLSPLAYOFFS ConferenceChampionship EASTERNCONFERENCE Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 23: New England 2, New York 1 Leg2— Saturday, Nov. 29: New York 2, New England 2 WESTERNCONFERENCE Leg1— Sunday, Nov. 23: LA Galaxy 1, Seattle 0 Leg2— Sunday, Nov. 30: Seattle 2, LA Galaxy 1, LA Galaxy advances on away goals MLSCup Sunday,Dec.7: New England at LA Galaxy,noon Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For Dec. 5 NCAAFootball TONIGHT ConferenceChampionships Mid-American AtDetroit Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog N. Illinois 6½ (62½) Bowling Green Pac-12 AtSantaClara Oregon 14½ (73½) Arizona TOMORROW at UConn 12 (45) SMU at TCU 34 (68) Iowa St. Temple 3 (44) at Tulane at Cincinnati 7 (57) Houston at Baylor 7½ (66½) Kansas St. at Oklahoma 21 (60) Oklahoma St. ConferenceChampionships ConferenceUSA at Marshall 11 (68½) Louisiana Tech Southeastern AtAtlanta Alabama 14½ (48½) Missouri AtlanticCoast AtCharlotte,N.C. Florida St. 4½ (61) Georgia Tech BigTen AtIndianapolis Wisconsin 4 (52½) Ohio St. MountainWest at Boise St. 22 (68½) Fresno St. NFL SUNDAY Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog at Miami 2½ (45½) Baltimore at Cincinnati 3 (47) Pittsburgh Indianapolis 3½ (50) at Cleveland Houston 5½ (42) at Jacksonville at Tennessee Pk (46) N.Y. Giants at New Orleans 10 (49½) Carolina at Detroit 10 (41½) Tampa Bay St. Louis 3 (44½) at Washington at Minnesota 6 (40) N.Y. Jets at Denver 10 (48) Buffalo at Arizona 1 (40½) Kansas City San Francisco 8 (41) at Oakland at Philadelphia 1 (48½) Seattle New England 3½ (51) at San Diego MONDAY at Green Bay 12½ (56) Atlanta NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Washington 5½ (210) Denver Oklahoma City 12 (203) at Philadelphia at Charlotte 5 (187½) New York at Brooklyn 1½ (202) Atlanta at Toronto 3 (208) Cleveland at Boston 4 (214½) Lakers at Memphis Pk (191) San Antonio Houston 2½ (205½) at Minnesota at Dallas 6½ (215½) Phoenix at Milwaukee Pk (197½) Miami at Utah 4 (190) Orlando at Sacramento 2½ (193½) Indiana NHL Favorite Line Underdog at Minnesota -135/+115 Anaheim at Winnipeg -145/+125 Colorado at Chicago -180/+160 Montreal | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2014 2 B