Red Bluff Daily News

December 12, 2014

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HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL Bishop O'Dowd vs. Mont- verde:3:30p.m.,ESPN2. NBA BASKETBALL Portland Trail Blazers at Chi- cago Bulls: 4p.m., ESPN. Los Angeles Lakers at San Antonio Spurs: 6:30p.m., ESPN. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Division I Tournament Quar- terfinal: 5p.m., ESPN2. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL CIF Regional Championship Division I: 7:30p.m., CSN. GOLF PGA Franklin Templeton Shootout Round 2: 10a.m., GOLF. APGA Australian Champion- ship Round 3: 5p.m., GOLF. AsianTour Thailand Champi- onship Round 3: 10p.m., GOLF. EPGA Alfred Dunhill Cham- pionship Round 3: 2:30a.m., GOLF. COLLEGE SOCCER College Cup, Semifinal: 2p.m., ESPNU. College Cup, Semifinal: 4:30 p.m. ESPNU. Ontheair By R.B. Fallstrom The Associated Press ST. LOUIS Drew Stanton hopped off the field to the bench and was carted off with a right knee injury. For the second straight meeting against the St. Louis Rams, the Arizona Cardinals lost a quarter- back. They won both times, thanks to strong defense. Chandler Catanzaro kicked four field goals and the Cardinals overcame the loss of Stanton with their stifling defense, moving closer to clinching a play- off spot with a 12-6 victory over the St. Louis Rams on Thursday night. Larry Foote had a sack and fumble recovery. The Rams (6-8) were held to Greg Zuerlein's two short field goals and had five three-and-out se- ries in the third quarter. Catanzaro's 23-yard field goal early in the second quarter ended nine quar- ters of shutout defense by St. Louis, which beat Wash- ington and Oakland by a combined 76-0 the previ- ous two weeks. The Rams were elimi- nated from playoff conten- tion. Ryan Lindley was inef- fective in his first appear- ance since 2012 in relief of Stanton, who injured his right knee on a sack in the third quarter, but it didn't matter. The Cardinals lost Carson Palmer to a sea- son-ending knee injury during their 31-14 home victory over St. Louis last month. The Cardinals (11-3) en- tered tied for the top over- all record in the NFC and will clinch a playoff spot if Sunday's Dallas-Philadel- phia game doesn't end in a tie, or a Detroit loss com- bined with a Green Bay vic- tory. Rams players had no ap- parent protests relating to unrest in nearby Ferguson. Two weeks ago, five players did the "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" pose coming out of the tunnel during pre- game introductions, and last week players wrote "I Can't Breathe!!!" on wrist bands and cleats. NFL Cardinals end Rams' streak Arizonamoveseven closer to clinching NFC playoff berth Because the Raiders (2- 11) do not have an indoor practice facility at their Al- ameda headquarters, they found an offsite location to prepare for Sunday's game in Kansas City against the Chiefs. The site is a public fa- cility that includes soccer fields and basketball hoops. Despite the hassle of having to move the play- ers, coaches and equip- ment — which included the video department — Sparano was satisfied with what the Raiders were able to accomplish. "We got good work in to- day," Sparano said. "Guys handled it well. It restricts you a little bit any time you do that but I think we're in pretty good shape." Six players — includ- ing two starters — did not make the trip because of injuries. Cornerback Tarell Brown was held out af- ter aggravating a foot and ankle injury when he fell awkwardly while attempt- ing to break up a pass dur- ing last week's win over the San Francisco 49ers. Though he came back and finished the game, Brown has not practiced this week. His status for Sunday's game in Kansas City is uncertain. "I didn't have as much concern yesterday," Sparano said. "But today not practicing gives me a little bit more concern." Right tackle Menelik Watson continues to be sidelined with ankle and foot injuries. The 2013 sec- ond-round pick had started nine games before sitting out against San Francisco. Defensive tackle Pat Sims was also held out with a shoulder injury. NOTES LB Sio Moore was limited with a hip injury. WR Andre Holmes (shoul- der) and CB Chimdi Che- kwa (shoulder) were both limited. ... S Larry Asante (shoulder) and TE Brian Leonhardt (concussion) did not practice. Raiders FROM PAGE 1 The four organizations chasing San Francisco in the NL West all changed their top baseball front- office official since last year's gathering: Tony La Russa took over at the Dia- mondbacks, Andrew Fried- man with the Dodgers, A. J. Preller with the Padres and Jeff Bridich with the Rockies. Matt Silverman replaced Friedman with the Rays. "People have been very, very aggressive," Detroit general manager Dave Dombrowski said. "Action starts more quickly, so when you get here I think you're prepared to move. Secondly, a lot of free agents started to sign. I think a lot of clubs were open-minded. There's been some change of re- gimes that have also con- tributed to that." A $155 million, six-year agreement between left- hander Jon Lester and the Cubs late Tuesday night seemed to break a market logjam. In deals announced just before midnight Wednes- day, the Dodgers acquired Kendrick from the Angels to play second and worked to obtain Rollins from Phil- adelphia in a remake of their middle infield. They dealt Gordon, Haren — who is mulling retirement — infielder Miguel Rojas and a player to be named or cash to the Marlins as part of a seven-player trade for left-hander Andrew He- aney, right-hander Chris Hatcher, infielder Kike Hernandez and catcher Austin Barnes. The Dodgers then sent Heaney, considered one of baseball's top pitching prospects, to the Angels for Kendrick. And as dawn broke, the Dodgers had a deal in place to send Kemp and catcher Tim Federowicz down In- terstate 5 to San Diego for catcher Yasmani Gran- dal and two pitchers. The trade was pending physical exams and approval by the commissioner's office of the $32 million the Dodg- ers will send the Padres to help offset the $107 million remaining in the final five years of Kemp's deal. And the Dodgers also worked to complete a $48 million, four-year agree- ment with pitcher Bran- don McCarthy. The Marlins, meanwhile, got pitcher Mat Latos from Cincinnati. Detroit made a pair of trades, sending pitcher Rick Porcello to Boston for Cespedes and two minor leaguers, and then replen- ishing its rotation with Si- mon, obtained from Cincin- nati for two minor leagu- ers. Reds GM Walt Jocketty made that deal in a hotel hallway — Dombrowski's room was right near his. Boston also worked to finalize a trade with Ari- zona for pitcher Wade Mi- ley and a free-agent deal with pitcher Justin Mas- terson. "There's obviously been a lot more movement. The pace has quickened, cer- tainly," Red Sox general manager Ben Chering- ton said. "As expected, it picked up after Lester." The Cubs also have a $20 million, two-year deal with right-hander Jason Ham- mel. Baseball FROM PAGE 1 "That's the first time I've heard of (that trend)," he said. "I don't know how to explain it. It's pretty cool and we'll see what hap- pens." Both of the other Heis- man finalists who will join Mariota in New York also left with hardware Thurs- day night. Amari Cooper became the first Alabama player to win the Biletnikoff Award as the nation's outstand- ing receiver. Melvin Gor- don became the third Wis- consin player to win the Doak Walker Award given to the top running back in the country. Gordon said Wednes- day he will skip his senior season to enter the NFL draft. He said he thinks he already has accomplished what he set out to do this year. "I think I did," Gordon said. "Part of the reason I came back was to prove I was a better player. I felt I did that. There were some things I didn't achieve. But I put us in a position for those goals. But I did come back to be a better player and show I was one of the best running backs in the nation." Other award winners Thursday were: Arizona linebacker Scooby Wright (Bednarik Award for de- fensive player of the year), Maryland's Brad Craddock (Lou Groza Award for na- tion's outstanding kicker), Utah's Tom Hackett (Ray Guy Award for punter of the year), Iowa offensive tackle Brandon Scherff (Outland Trophy for out- standing interior lineman), and Louisville's Gerod Hol- liman (Jim Thorpe Award for nation's best defensive back). Three other awards were announced prior to the live ceremony. The Rimington Trophy for the nation's outstanding center went to Auburn's Reese Dis- mukes. Florida State's Nick O'Leary was honored with the John Mackey Award, given to the nation's top tight end, and Duke's Da- vid Helton won the Wil- liam V. Campbell Trophy for academic success, foot- ball performance and com- munity service. TCU coach Gary Patter- son was selected the Home Depot Coach of the Year after guiding the Horned Frogs from a 4-8 mark in 2013 to 11-1 this season, falling just short of a spot in the playoff. "Being outside of the College Football Play- off, I knew my players were disappointed. But we have to be the leaders not only in football, but in America," Patterson said. "(The Peach Bowl matchup with Ole Miss) is an opportunity one more time to show what we're made of." Awards FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL AMERICANCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 10 3 0 .769 385 293 San Diego 8 5 0 .615 293 272 Kansas City 7 6 0 .538 291 241 Oakland 2 11 0 .154 200 350 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England10 3 0 .769 401 267 Miami 7 6 0 .538 314 260 Buffalo 7 6 0 .538 281 241 N.Y. Jets 2 11 0 .154 214 349 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 9 4 0 .692 407 307 Houston 7 6 0 .538 314 260 Tennessee 2 11 0 .154 220 374 Jacksonville 2 11 0 .154 199 356 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 8 4 1 .654 281 289 Pittsburgh 8 5 0 .615 362 319 Baltimore 8 5 0 .615 356 255 Cleveland 7 6 0 .538 276 270 NATIONALCONFERENCE WESTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 11 3 0 .786 287 244 Seattle 9 4 0 .692 322 235 San Francisco7 6 0 .538 244 268 St. Louis 6 8 0 .429 291 297 EASTDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 9 4 0 .692 389 309 Dallas 9 4 0 .692 343 301 N.Y. Giants 4 9 0 .308 293 326 Washington 3 10 0 .231 244 346 SOUTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 5 8 0 .385 328 342 New Orleans 5 8 0 .385 333 359 Carolina 4 8 1 .346 269 341 Tampa Bay 2 11 0 .154 237 348 NORTHDIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 10 3 0 .769 423 304 Detroit 9 4 0 .692 265 224 Minnesota 6 7 0 .462 263 281 Chicago 5 8 0 .385 281 378 Thursday'sgame Arizona 12, St. Louis 6 Sunday,Dec.14 Oakland at Kansas City, 10 a.m. Pi tt sb ur gh a t A tla nt a, 1 0 a .m . Washington at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Miami at New England, 10 a.m. Houston at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Baltimore, 10 a.m. Green Bay at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Carolina, 10 a.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Denver at San Diego, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Tennessee, 1:05 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 1:25 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 1:25 p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. Monday,Dec.15 New Orleans at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Thursday,Dec.18 Tennessee at Jacksonville, 5:25 p.m. Cardinals12,Rams6 Arizona 0 6 3 3 — 12 St.Louis 3 0 0 3 — 6 Firstquarter StL— FG Zuerlein 24, 6:57. Secondquarter Ari— FG Catanzaro 23, 13:36. Ari— FG Catanzaro 44, 8:25. Thirdquarter Ari— FG Catanzaro 51, 7:23. Fourthquarter Ari— FG Catanzaro 46, 10:48. StL— FG Zuerlein 19, 6:07. A— 55,880. Ari StL First downs 13 13 Total net yards 274 280 Rushes yds 33-143 20-69 Passing 131 211 Punt returns 4-54 2-(-2) Kickoff returns 1-18 4-116 Int ret 1-0 0-0 Comp-att-int 16-30-0 20-39-1 Sacked yds lost 1-8 2-18 Punts 8-38.4 8-50.5 Fumbles lost 1-0 3-1 Penalties yds 8-59 6-69 Time of poss. 34:24 25:36 INDIVIDUALSTATS Rushing— Arizona, K.Williams 15-75, Taylor 14-61, Stanton 2-3, Ginn Jr. 1-3, Housler 1-1. St. Louis, Mason 13-33, Bailey 1-13, Hill 3-11, Austin 1-8, B.Cunningham 2-4. Passing— Arizona, Lindley 4-10-0-30, Stanton 12-20-0-109. St. Louis, Hill 20- 39-1-229. Receiving— Arizona, Fitzgerald 7-30, Floyd 2-55, Jo.Brown 2-22, K.Williams 2-11, Carlson 1-11, Fells 1-6, Ginn Jr. 1-4. St. Louis, Bailey 5-74, Britt 5-65, B.Cunningham 3-23, Cook 3-22, Austin 2-14, Harkey 1-21, Kendricks 1-10. Missedfieldgoals— None. 2014COLLEGEFOOTBALL AWARDSWINNERS Thursday From the Walt Disney World Resort: WalterCampNationalPlayeroftheYear • Marcus Mariota, Oregon MaxwellAward(bestall-aroundplayer) • Marcus Mariota, Oregon DaveyO'BrienNationalQuarterback Award • Marcus Mariota, Oregon DoakWalkerAward(outstandingrun- ningback) • Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin FredBiletnikoffAward(outstanding receiver) • Amari Cooper, Alabama ChuckBedarnikTrophy(bestdefensive player) • Scooby Wright III, Arizona OutlandTrophy(outstandingcollegiate interiorlineman) • Brandon Scherff, Iowa JimThorpeAward(bestdefensiveback) • Gerod Holliman, Louisville LouGrozaAward(outstandingplace- kicker) • Brad Craddock, Maryland RayGuyAward(bestpunter) • Tom Hackett, Utah SportsSpiritAward • Sterling Shepard and Bob Stoops, Oklahoma CoachoftheYear • Gary Patterson, TCU NCFAAContributiontoCollegeFootball Award • Grant Teaff x-CampAwardwasannouncedtodayin NewHaven,Conn. Basketball NBA WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 19 2 .905 — Clippers 16 5 .762 3 Phoenix 12 11 .522 8 Sacramento 11 11 .500 8½ Lakers 6 16 .273 13½ SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 17 4 .810 — Houston 16 5 .762 1 San Antonio 16 6 .727 1½ Dallas 17 7 .708 1½ New Orleans 10 11 .476 7 NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 17 5 .773 — Denver 10 12 .455 7 Oklahoma City 9 13 .409 8 Utah 6 16 .273 11 Minnesota 5 16 .238 11½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 16 6 .727 — Brooklyn 8 12 .400 7 Boston 7 13 .350 8 New York 4 20 .167 13 Philadelphia 2 19 .095 13½ SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Atlanta 15 6 .714 — Washington 15 6 .714 — Miami 10 12 .455 5½ Orlando 9 15 .375 7½ Charlotte 6 15 .286 9 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Cleveland 13 8 .619 — Chicago 13 8 .619 — Milwaukee 11 12 .478 3 Indiana 7 15 .318 6½ Detroit 3 19 .136 10½ Wednesday'sgames Washington 91, Orlando 89 Clippers 103, Indiana 96 Charlotte 96, Boston 87 Atlanta 95, Philadelphia 79 Chicago 105, Brooklyn 80 Dallas 112, New Orleans 107 Minnesota 90, Portland 82 San Antonio 109, New York 95 Golden State 105, Houston 93 Denver 102, Miami 82 Thursday'sgames Okl ah oma C it y 1 03 , C le ve la nd 9 4 Houston at Sacramento, (n.) Friday'sgames Portland at Chicago, 4 p.m. Clippers at Washington, 4 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Indiana at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. New York at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Cleveland at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Memphis, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Detroit at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Miami at Utah, 6 p.m. Lakers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. NCAAWOMEN'STOP25 Thursday 1. South Carolina (8-0) did not play. 2. UConn (6-1) did not play. 3. Texas (7-0) did not play. 4. Texas A&M (10-0) did not play. 5. Notre Dame (9-1) did not play. 6. North Carolina (8-0) did not play. 7. Stanford (5-2) did not play. 8. Kentucky (8-1) did not play. 9. Baylor (7-1) did not play. 10. Louisville (8-1) did not play. 11. Tennessee (6-2) did not play. 12. Nebraska (8-1) beat Creighton 60-57. 13. Duke (5-3) did not play. 14. Maryland (7-2) did not play. 15. Oregon State (7-0) did not play. 16. Georgia (10-0) did not play. 17. Rutgers (8-1) did not play. 18. California (7-1) did not play. 19. Michigan State (5-2) did not play. 20. Oklahoma State (6-1) did not play. 20. Syracuse (6-1) did not play. 22. Mississippi State (9-0) beat Louisiana Tech 81-77. 23. West Virginia (7-1) did not play. 24. Iowa (8-2) beat Iowa State 76-67. 25. DePaul (6-3) did not play. NCAAWOMEN'SFARWEST Arizona 56, Southern U. 45 Utah Valley 58, Air Force 44 NCAAMEN'SFARWEST Boise St. 91, NW Nazarene 51 NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 30 19 6 5 43 87 80 Vancouver 29 18 9 2 38 88 81 Calgary 30 17 11 2 36 93 80 Los Angeles 29 15 9 5 35 77 63 San Jose 30 15 11 4 34 86 81 Arizona 29 10 16 3 23 67 95 Edmonton 29 7 17 5 19 63 98 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 29 20 8 1 41 91 57 Nashville 28 19 7 2 40 78 55 St. Louis 29 19 8 2 40 86 68 Winnipeg 30 15 9 6 36 72 70 Minnesota 26 15 10 1 31 76 65 Colorado 29 10 13 6 26 76 95 Dallas 28 10 13 5 25 81 100 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 30 19 8 3 41 103 78 Detroit 29 17 6 6 40 89 72 Montreal 30 18 10 2 38 77 77 Toronto 28 16 9 3 35 95 81 Boston 29 15 13 1 31 74 75 Florida 26 11 8 7 29 58 68 Ottawa 28 11 12 5 27 73 79 Buffalo 29 11 16 2 24 52 88 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 27 18 6 3 39 88 64 N.Y. Islanders 29 19 10 0 38 93 85 Washington 28 13 10 5 31 81 77 N.Y. Rangers 26 12 10 4 28 77 76 New Jersey 30 11 14 5 27 69 87 Philadelphia 28 10 13 5 25 74 86 Columbus 28 11 15 2 24 67 92 Carolina 28 8 17 3 19 60 78 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday'sgames Toronto 2, Detroit 1, SO Anaheim 2, Edmonton 1 Thursday'sgames Colorado 4, Winnipeg 3, SO Chicago 3, Boston 2 Buffalo 4, Calgary 3 Philadelphia 4, New Jersey 1 Columbus 3, Washington 2, OT Los Angeles 5, Ottawa 3 Tampa Bay 2, Carolina 1 St. Louis 6, N.Y. Islanders 3 Nashville 5, Arizona 1 Minnesota at San Jose, (n.) Friday'sgames Calgary at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Los Angeles at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. Florida at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Anaheim at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m. Golf FRANKLINTEMPLETON SHOOTOUT Thursday At Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort, Tiburon Golf Club Course Naples, Fla. Purse: $3.1 million Yardage: 7,288;Par: 72 (36-36) FirstRound(scramble) Jason Day/Cameron Tringale -17 Harris English/Matt Kuchar -15 Graeme McDowell/Gary Woodland -13 Keegan Bradley/Camilo Villegas -13 Ryan Palmer/Jimmy Walker -13 Jerry Kelly/Steve Stricker -12 Sean O'Hair/Kenny Perry -12 Retief Goosen/Mike Weir -12 Justin Leonard/Rory Sabbatini -12 Billy Horschel/Ian Poulter -11 Patrick Reed/Brandt Snedeker -11 Charles Howell III/Scott Verplank -11 Odds GL AN TZ -C UL VE RL INE For Dec. 12 NCAAFootball TOMORROW Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog Navy-x 15 (57½) Army x-at Baltimore DEC.20 NewOrleansBowl La.-Lafayette 1 (60½) Nevada NewMexicoBowl AtAlbuquerque Utah St. 10½ (49) UTEP LasVegasBowl Utah 4½ (58) Colorado St. FamousIdahoPotatoBowl AtBoise W. Michigan 1 (56½) Air Force CamelliaBowl AtMontgomery,Ala. South Alabama 2½ (54) Bowling Green DEC.22 MiamiBeachBowl Memphis 1 (57½) BYU DEC.23 BocaRaton(Fla.)Bowl Marshall 10½ (64½) N. Illinois PoinsettiaBowl AtSanDiego San Diego St. 2 (54) Navy DEC.24 BahamasBowl AtNassau W. Kentucky 2½ (65½) Cent. Michigan HawaiiBowl AtHonolulu Fresno St. Pk (58½) Rice NFL SUNDAY Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog at Kansas City 10 (41½) Oakland at Baltimore 14 (45½) Jacksonville Pittsburgh 2½ (54½) at Atlanta at Indianapolis 6½ (49) Houston at Cleveland 1 (44) Cincinnati at New England 7½ (48) Miami at Carolina 3 (41½) Tampa Bay at N.Y. Giants 6½ (47) Washington Green Bay 4½ (50½) at Buffalo at Detroit 7½ (43) Minnesota N.Y. Jets 2½ (42) at Tennessee Denver 4 (50½) at San Diego at Seattle 10 (38) San Francisco at Philadelphia 3½ (55½) Dallas MONDAY New Orleans 3 (54) at Chicago NCAABasketball Favorite Line Underdog at Iowa 7 Iowa St. NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Chicago 2½ (193) Portland Clippers 3½ (201) at Washington at Boston 8 (201) New York at Atlanta 8½ (197) Orlando at Toronto 9 (201½) Indiana at Brooklyn 8 (198) Philadelphia at Memphis 9 (190) Charlotte Oklahoma City 10 (204) at Minnesota Cleveland 3 (205½) at New Orleans Miami 2½ (191½) at Utah at Phoenix 8 (201½) Detroit at San Antonio 11 (205) Lakers NHL Favorite Line Underdog at Pittsburgh -200/+170 Calgary at Montreal -130/+110 Los Angeles at Detroit -200/+170 Florida Anaheim -160/+140 at Edmonton Transactions BASEBALL MajorLeagueBaseball OfficeOFTHECommissioner: Sus- pended minor league C Rodney Daal 100 games, without pay, following a third positive test for a drug of abuse in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. AmericanLeague BaltimoreOrioles: Acquired RHP Jason Garcia from Houston for a player to be named or cash. BostonRedSox: Acquired RHP Rick Porcello from Detroit for OF Yoenis Cespedes, RHP Alex Wilson, and LHP Gabe Speier. ChicagoWhiteSox: Acquired LHP Dan Jennings from Miami for RHP Andre Rienzo. DetroitTigers: Acquired RHP Alfredo Simon from Cincinnati for INF Eugenio Suarez and RHP Jonathon Crawford. LosAngelesAngels: Acquired INF Josh Rutledge from Colorado for RHP Jairo Diaz. Acquired LHP Andrew Heaney from the L.A. Dodgers for INF Howie Kendrick. TexasRangers: Agreed to terms with RHP Anthony Bass, OF Antoan Richard- son, and RHP Ross Wolf on minor league contracts. NationalLeague ColoradoRockies: Acquired RHP Austin House and cash from Oakland for INF Mark Canha. LosAngelesDodgers: Designated C Ryan Lavarnway for assignment. MiamiMarlins: Acquired 2B Dee Gordon, RHP Dan Haren and INF Miguel Rojas from the L.A. Dodgers for LHP Andrew Heaney and RHP Chris Hatcher, INF Enrique Hernandez and C Austin Barnes. Acquired RHP Mat Latos from Cincinnati for RHP Anthony DeSclafani and C Chad Wallach. NewYorkMets: Agreed to terms with LHP Scott Rice on a minor league contract. BASKETBALL NationalBasketballAssociation AtlantaHawks: Named Nzinga Shaw chief diversity and inclusion officer. FOOTBALL NationalFootballLeague ChicagoBears: Signed RB Montell Owens. Placed LB D.J. Williams on the injured reserve list. CincinnatiBengals: Signed DT Kwame Geathers to the practice squad. SeattleSeahawks: Released LB Allen Bradford. Signed DE David King from the Cincinnati practice squad. WashingtonRedskins: Placed T Morgan Moses on the injured reserve list. Signed RB Chris Thompson from the practice squad and T Edawn Coughman to the practice squad. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague NHL: Suspended Dallas F Ryan Garbutt for three games, without pay, for slew- footing Winnipeg D Dustin Byfuglien during a game in Dallas on Dec. 9. AnaheimDucks: Activated G Jason LaBarbera from injured reserve. As- signed F Dany Heatley to Norfolk (AHL) on a long-term injury conditioning loan. Assigned D Josh Manson to Norfolk. As- signed G Igor Bobkov to Utah (ECHL). CalgaryFlames: Activated F Joe Col- borne form injured reserve. Assigned F Michael Ferland to Adirondack (AHL). DallasStars: Recalled F Travis Morin from Texas (AHL). Assigned D Jamie Oleksiak to Texas. DetroitRedWings: Recalled D Xavier Ouellet from Grand Rapids (AHL) and D Scott Czarnowczan from Toledo (ECHL). FloridaPanthers: Recalled D Shane O'brien from San Antonio (AHL). WashingtonCapitals: Assigned LW Aaron Volpatti to Hershey (AHL) on a long-term injury/illness exception conditioning loan. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2014 2 B

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