Red Bluff Daily News

January 02, 2015

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COLLEGEBASKETBALL Washington State vs. Stan- ford:noon,PAC-12. Marquette vs. Georgetown Women's: 4:30p.m., FS1. Florida State vs. Mississippi State: 5p.m., ESPNU. Texas-El Paso vs. North Texas: 5p.m., CSN. UCLA vs. Colorado: 7p.m., FS1. Washington vs. California: 7 p.m., PAC-12. USC vs. Utah: 7p.m., ESPNU. HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL Dematha vs. Sierra Canyon: 1:30p.m., ESPNU. Our Savior New American vs. Findlay Prep: 3:30p.m., ESPNU. NBA BASKETBALL Toronto Raptors at Golden State Warriors: 7:30p.m., CSNBA. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Armed Forces Bowl: Houston vs. Pittsburgh, 9a.m., ESPN. TaxSlayer Bowl: Iowa vs. Ten- nessee, 12:20p.m., ESPN. Alamo Bowl: Kansas State vs. UCLA, 3:45p.m., ESPN. Cactus Bowl: Washington vs. Oklahoma State, 7:15p.m., ESPN. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Under Armour All-America Game: Team Highlight vs. Team Armor: 1p.m., ESPN2. Ontheair champOhioState. Down 41-21 going into the fourth quarter, Michi- gan State got the winning touchdown after Marcus Rush blocked Chris Calla- han's 43-yard field goal at- tempt with 1:05 left. "It's just sort of crazy," coach Mark Dantonio said. "I really probably can't put it into words. We just kept pace. We didn't panic." When two-time Big 12 champ Baylor got the ball back for one last try, Bryce Petty was sacked on con- secutive plays before Riley Bullough's clinching inter- ception. That was quite a final defensive stand under co- ordinator Pat Narduzzi, who after 11 seasons and two schools with Dantonio is leaving the Spartans to take over as head coach at Pittsburgh. Narduzzi will be about 20 miles away Friday to watch the Pan- thers play Houston in the Armed Forces Bowl on the TCU campus. The Cotton Bowl was the lead-in game Thursday to the two national semifinals that Baylor (11-2) hoped to be part of instead — though that doesn't mat- ter now. "We've played a lot of really good games over the last seven seasons. Won a lot of really good games. And this is one of the tougher non-wins that I've ever experienced," Baylor coach Art Briles said. "It's got nothing to do with the big picture. The small pic- ture right now is letting a game get away from us to- day." Petty completed 36 of 51 passes for a Cotton Bowl- record 550 yards and three touchdowns, two to speedy freshman KD Cannon and the other to 390-pount backup guard LaQuan McGowan in the third quarter for a 41-21 lead. Baylor had 583 total yards, even with minus-20 yards rushing. Jeremy Langford ran for 162 yards and three touch- downs for the Spartans. Cook was 24-of-42 pass- ing for 314 yards and two touchdowns with two in- terceptions. Langford's 1-yard plunge with 4:55 left got the Spar- tans to 41-35, a play after Cook's 10-yard scramble that was initially ruled a touchdown before a replay review. Cotton FROM PAGE 1 Winston's first loss as a col- lege starter, maybe his last game in college, he threw for 348 yards and turned the ball over twice. No Heisman jinx for Mariota. He was mostly brilliant again. The ju- nior passed for 338 yards and two touchdowns and sprinted in for a 23 yard- touchdown with 13:56 left in the fourth quarter that made it 52-20 and made the Ducks the first team to reach 50 points in Rose Bowl history. This was No. 101. "59-20, I did not expect that," Oregon defensive end Arik Armstead said. The Ducks fans spent much of the final quarter mockingly doing the Sem- inoles' warchant and tom- ahawk chop. Next stop: The Lone Star state to try to win the program's first national title. The Ducks sported T- shirts after the game that read "WON NOT DONE." The first playoff game at college football's high- est level, the type of post- season game fans have longed for forever, looked like it would be a classic for a little more than two quarters. Under a cloudless sky, on a chilly day in Pasa- dena, the Rose Bowl fea- tured the third matchup of Heisman Trophy win- ners and a couple of quar- terbacks who could be vy- ing to be the first overall pick in April's NFL draft. Mariota and Winston were both OK in the first half, missing some throws and making some spectac- ular ones. It was Mariota who threw the only inter- ception, just his third of the season. The late pick didn't hurt the Ducks much because Florida State's Ro- berto Aguayo missed a 54- yard field goal on the final play of the half. For the sixth time this season, Florida State was trailing at the half. And then the hole got deeper. The Seminoles' first turnover was a huge swing. Freshman Dalvin Cook was stripped by Derrick Malone Jr. with Florida State in Or- egon territory. The Ducks quickly flipped the field and Freeman scored his second touchdown of the day from 3 yards out to make it 25-13. Oregon coach Mark Hel- frich had called the Sem- inoles "unflappable" dur- ing the week leading up to the Rose Bowl — and they showed it on the next drive. Winston threw an 18- yard touchdown pass to freshman Travis Rudolph. Midway through the third quarter it was 25-20 Ore- gon and then it was Mari- ota's turn. He zipped a pass to Dar- ren Carrington near the sideline and the receiver made one cut and was gone for a 56-yard touchdown that made it 32-20. Instead of an answer from Florida State, this time another fumble by Cook and the wave of big plays and points that the Ducks do better than any team in the country started rumbling. Two plays after the turnover, Mariota hit Carrington for a 30-yard touchdown and it was 39- 20 and the Rose Bowl, filled mostly with green and yel- low, was rumbling, too. To win the national championship last season, Florida State erased an 18-point lead against Au- burn at the Rose Bowl, but that was in the first half. Coach Jimbo Fish- er's crew were comeback kings this season — they came from 17 down against North Carolina State and 21 back against Louisville — but this was the steep- est hill to climb yet. With the sun just about set behind the San Gabriel mountains, Florida State faced a fourth-and-five in Oregon territory. Field goals weren't going to get it done. The 'Noles had to go. Winston had lots of time but couldn't find a receiver. He was flushed from the pocket and as he loaded to throw the ball slipped out of his hands. The fumble bounced into Tony Wash- ington's arms and the de- fensive end went 58 yards for a score. "It was just a crazy play," Winston said. The wave had washed over Florida State. And it just kept coming. Winston threw a pick on the next possession on a tipped ball and was so frus- trated when he got to the sideline Fisher appeared to threaten to bench him if he didn't calm down. By the time Mariota raced into the end zone, day had turned to night in Pasadena and the Semi- noles were done. Florida State had not lost since Nov. 24, 2012, to Florida. Winston had never lost a college start in 26 tries. The next Florida State turnover, a fumble by Je- sus Wilson, made it five second-half turnover by the Seminoles. It was a prob- lem all year for the 'Noles, who came into the game 84th in the nation in turn- over margin (minus-3), and in the playoff it was ulti- mately what doomed them. "We beat ourselves," Winston said. "We were never stopped at all." Winston, whose two years at Florida State have been filled with spectac- ular play on the field and controversy off, still has two years of eligibility left, but he has nothing left to prove. Mariota and the Ducks are moving on, with a chance to add the biggest prize of all — the only sig- nificant one missing — to their trophy case. Rose FROM PAGE 1 The Kings were one of the feel-good stories of the first month of the sea- son, with coach Michael Malone instilling a new commitment to defense and getting Cousins to har- ness his hair-trigger tem- per while they put together a 9-5 start. But Cousins was sidelined with menin- gitis and Malone was sur- prisingly fired on Dec. 15. Sacramento was just 2-6 in its first eight games without Malone, including a 22-point loss in Boston on Wednesday in which Cous- ins was ejected after tus- sling with Celtics rookie Marcus Smart. A loss to the lowly Tim- berwolves (5-26) may have been rock bottom, espe- cially with how Sacra- mento was humming on offense early. The Kings hit 78 percent of their shots in a 37-point first quarter, but led by a modest eight points thanks to six turnovers and allow- ing the Wolves to shoot 57 percent themselves. Sacramento led 81-68 midway through the third quarter, but Gay fouled out with 4:21 to play and Cous- ins picked up his sixth less than two minutes later. Wiggins scored on a drive and a spin move and Thaddeus Young hit two free throws to tie it at 99 with four minutes to go. Then Williams, the for- mer Timberwolves No. 2 overall pick, responded with a 3-pointer that put Sacramento up for good. Tip-Ins Kings: • Gay committed a ca- reer-high eight of Sacra- mento's 20 turnovers. • F Omri Casspi did not play because of a knee injury and PG Ra- mon Sessions missed his fifth straight game with a strained lower back. • After starting the first 31 games of the year, F Ja- son Thompson did not play on Wednesday against Bos- ton and came off the bench against Minnesota. • Tyrone Corbin coached with a walking boot on his left leg after he tore an Achilles in practice earlier in the week. Timberwolves: • Coach Flip Saunders said C Nikola Pekovic will get an MRI on his right an- kle next week. If it comes back clear, he could start some light contact work in practice. • Minnesota's 36 points in the paint in the first half was its highest total for a half this season. BULLS 106, NUGGETS 101 Derrick Rose scored 13 of his 17 points in the fourth quarter, and the Chicago Bulls beat the Denver Nug- gets. Jimmy Butler scored 26 for Chicago, and Pau Gasol added 17 points. Kings FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL NFL PLAYOFFS Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 3 ArizonaatCarolina,1:35p.m.(ESPN) Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 5:15 p.m. (NBC) Sunday, Jan. 4 Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 1:05 (CBS) Detroit at Dallas, 1:40 p.m. (FOX) Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 10 Baltimore, Indianapolis or Cincinnati at New England, 1:35 p.m. (NBC) Arizona, Detroit or Carolina at Seattle, 5:15 p.m. (FOX) Sunday, Jan. 11 Arizona, Dallas or Carolina at Green Bay, 10:05 a.m. (FOX) Indianapolis, Cincinnati or Pittsburgh at Denver, 1:40 p.m. (CBS) Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 18 NFC, 12:05 p.m. (FOX) AFC, 3:40 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 25 ^At Glendale, Ariz. Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 5 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 1 ^At Glendale, Ariz. AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 3:30 p.m. (NBC) COLLEGE FOOTBALL FBS BOWL GLANCE Thursday, Jan. 1 Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. Wisconsin 34, Auburn 31, OT Cotton Bowl Classic At Arlington, Texas Michigan State 42, Baylor 41 Citrus Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Missouri 33, Minnesota 17 Rose Bowl At Pasadena Playoff semifinal: Oregon 59, Florida State 20 Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Playoff semifinal: Alabama (12-1) vs. Ohio State (12-1), (n.) Friday, Jan. 2 Armed Forces Bowl At F or t W or th , T exa s Pittsburgh (6-6) vs. Houston (7-5), 9 a.m. (ESPN) TaxSlayer Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Iowa (7-5) vs. Tennessee (6-6), 12:20 p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At San Antonio UCLA (9-3) vs. Kansas State (9-3), 3:45 p.m. (ESPN) Cactus Bowl At Tempe, Ariz. Oklahoma State (6-6) vs. Washington (8-5), 7:15 p.m. (ESPN) Rose Bowl No. 3 Oregon 59, No. 2 Florida St. 20 Florida St. 3 10 7 0 — 20 Oregon 8 10 27 14 — 59 First quarter FSU — FG Aguayo 28, 9:06. Ore — Freeman 1 run (French pass from Alie), 6:55. Second quarter Ore — FG Schneider 28, 10:12. FSU — FG Aguayo 26, 5:18. Ore — Tyner 1 run (Schneider kick), 2:18. FSU — K.Williams 10 run (Aguayo kick), :36. Third quarter Ore — Freeman 3 run (Schneider kick), 11:54. FSU — Rudolph 18 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), 8:07. Ore — Carrington 56 pass from Mariota (Schneider kick), 6:43. Ore — Carrington 30 pass from Mariota (Schneider kick), 4:21. Ore — Washington 58 fumble return (kick blocked), 1:36. Fourth quarter Ore — Mariota 23 run (Schneider kick), 13:56. Ore — Tyner 21 run (Schneider kick), 10:13. A — 91,322. FSU Ore First downs 28 30 Rushes yds 39-180 45-301 Passing 348 338 Comp-Att-Int 29-48-1 26-36-1 Return yards 0 0 Punts-Avg. 4-33.5 2-38.5 Fumbles-lost 7-4 2-1 Penalties-yards 6-48 6-50 Time of poss. 32:43 27:17 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — Florida St., D.Cook 15-103, K.Williams 12-80, R.Green 2-7, Pender 2-5, Winston 8-(minus 15). Oregon, Tyner 13-124, Mariota 8-62, Freeman 12-44, Benoit 4-40, Bassett 4-25, Nelson 0-14, Marshall 1-0, Team 1-(minus 2), Lockie 2-(minus 6). Passing — Florida St., Winston 29-45-1- 348, Maguire 0-3-0-0. Oregon, Mariota 26-36-1-338. Receiving — Florida St., Rudolph 6-96, Greene 6-59, Wilson 5-72, K.Williams 5-59, D.Cook 3-24, Lane 2-22, Stevenson 1-12, O'leary 1-4. Oregon, Carrington 7-165, Baylis 6-73, Marshall 5-20, Nelson 4-40, Stanford 2-21, Freeman 2-19. Basketball NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 25 5 .833 — Clippers 22 11 .667 41/2 Phoenix 18 16 .529 9 Sacramento 14 19 .424 121/2 Lakers 10 22 .313 16 Southwest Division W L Pct GB Memphis 23 8 .742 — Houston 22 9 .710 1 Dallas 23 10 .697 1 San Antonio 20 14 .588 41/2 New Orleans 16 16 .500 71/2 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Portland 26 7 .788 — Oklahoma City 16 17 .485 10 Denver 13 20 .394 13 Utah 11 21 .344 141/2 Minnesota 5 26 .161 20 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 24 8 .750 — Brooklyn 15 16 .484 81/2 Boston 11 18 .379 111/2 New York 5 29 .147 20 Philadelphia 4 26 .133 19 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 23 8 .742 — Washington 22 9 .710 1 Miami 14 19 .424 10 Orlando 13 22 .371 12 Charlotte 10 23 .303 14 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 23 10 .697 — Cleveland 18 14 .563 41/2 Milwaukee 17 16 .515 6 Indiana 12 21 .364 11 Detroit 8 23 .258 14 We dne sda y' s g ame s Boston 106, Sacramento 84 Indiana 106, Miami 95 Clippers 99, New York 78 Houston 102, Charlotte 83 San Antonio 95, New Orleans 93, OT Milwaukee 96, Cleveland 80 Oklahoma City 137, Phoenix 134, OT Thursday's games Chicago 106, Denver 101 Sacramento 110, Minnesota 107 Friday's games Brooklyn at Orlando, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Dallas at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at New York, 4:30 p.m. Houston at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Washington at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Indiana at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Utah, 6 p.m. To ro nt o a t G ol de n S ta te , 7 :3 0 p .m . Memphis at Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Saturday's games Charlotte at Orlando, 4 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 5 p.m. Miami at Houston, 5 p.m. Utah at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Washington at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Memphis at Denver, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Portland, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Kings 110, Timberwolves 107 KINGS (110) Gay 7-12 7-8 21, D.Williams 6-10 2-2 17, Cousins 8-14 3-3 19, Collison 8-15 4-4 21, McLemore 6-9 1-2 14, Thompson 3-3 2-2 8, Stauskas 0-4 0-0 0, Landry 1-4 6-8 8, McCallum 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 40-74 25-29 110. TIMBERWOLVES (107) Muhammad 5-13 4-5 15, Young 4-8 1-2 9, Dieng 7-10 1-4 15, LaVine 3-5 0-0 6, Wiggins 11-22 4-5 27, Budinger 1-4 0-0 2, Adrien 3-5 4-4 10, Bennett 2-7 0-0 4, M.Williams 3-10 0-0 8, Daniels 3-7 2-2 11. Totals 42-91 16-22 107. Sacramento 37 23 24 26 _ 110 Minnesota 29 29 22 27 _ 107 3-Point Goals: Sacramento 5-12 (D.Williams 3-6, McLemore 1-2, Collison 1-2, Stauskas 0-2), Minnesota 7-24 (Daniels 3-7, M.Williams 2-5, Wiggins 1-4, Muhammad 1-4, Budinger 0-1, Bennett 0-1, Young 0-2); Fouled out: Cousins, Gay; Rebounds: Sacramento 48 (Landry 9), Minnesota 45 (Dieng 10); Assists: Sac- ramento 23 (Collison 6), Minnesota 22 (M.Williams 8); Total fouls: Sacramento 26, Minnesota 24; Technicals: Minnesota Coach Saunders; A: 13,337 (19,356). LEADERS Through Dec. 31 SCORING G FG FT Pts Avg Harden, HOU 31 260 260 858 27.7 James, CLE 29 256 171 731 25.2 Davis, NOR 31 294 165 753 24.3 Bryant, LAL 29 235 184 698 24.1 Anthony, NYK 30 270 135 717 23.9 Wade, MIA 25 227 111 580 23.2 Aldridge, POR 29 263 122 663 22.9 Curry, GOL 30 244 108 684 22.8 Griffin, LAC 33 288 163 746 22.6 Lillard, POR 33 244 144 723 21.9 Butler, CHI 30 211 201 652 21.7 Bosh, MIA 25 195 108 534 21.4 Thompson, GOL 29 219 90 611 21.1 Irving, CLE 30 224 127 625 20.8 Gay, SAC 30 221 149 623 20.8 Lowry, TOR 32 228 149 661 20.7 Ellis, DAL 33 268 108 681 20.6 Gasol, MEM 31 228 166 624 20.1 Hayward, UTA 32 204 150 614 19.2 Nowitzki, DAL 31 207 126 579 18.7 REBOUNDS G Off Def Tot Avg Jordan, LAC 33 140 312 452 13.7 Drummond, DET 31 154 243 397 12.8 Chandler, DAL 32 131 251 382 11.9 Randolph, MEM 26 97 200 297 11.4 Vucevic, ORL 29 88 239 327 11.3 Gasol, CHI 29 71 250 321 11.1 Aldridge, POR 29 80 230 310 10.7 Duncan, SAN 29 77 233 310 10.7 Davis, NOR 31 84 243 327 10.5 Love, CLE 31 58 255 313 10.1 ASSISTS G Ast Avg Wall, WAS 31 320 10.3 Lawson, DEN 31 318 10.3 Rondo, DAL 28 284 10.1 Paul, LAC 33 310 9.4 Curry, GOL 30 230 7.7 Lo wr y, T OR 32 2 45 7. 7 James, CLE 29 221 7.6 Car-Will., PHL 23 169 7.3 Holiday, NOR 32 232 7.3 Teague, ATL 28 196 7.0 NCAA MEN'S TOP 25 1. Kentucky (13-0) did not play. 2. Duke (12-0) did not play. 3. Virginia (12-0) did not play. 4. Wisconsin (13-1) did not play. 5. Louisville (12-1) did not play. 6. Villanova (13-0) did not play. 7. Gonzaga (13-1) did not play. 8. Arizona (12-1) did not play. 9. Iowa State (10-1) did not play. 10. Utah (10-2) did not play. 11. Texas (11-2) did not play. 12. Maryland (13-1) did not play. 13. Kansas (10-2) did not play. 14. Notre Dame (13-1) did not play. 15. St. John's (11-2) did not play. 16. Wichita State (11-2) did not play. 17. West Virginia (12-1) did not play. 18. Oklahoma (9-3) did not play. 19. North Carolina (10-3) did not play. 20. Ohio State (11-3) did not play. 21. Washington (11-1) did not play. 22. Baylor (11-1) did not play. 23. Northern Iowa (11-2) lost to Evans- ville 52-49. 24. Colorado State (14-0) did not play. 25. Georgetown (8-4) did not play. NCAA MEN'S FAR WEST BYU 81, Santa Clara 46 E. Washington 84, Weber St. 78 Montana 66, N. Colorado 48 North Dakota 67, Montana St. 60 Pacific 77, Loyola Marymount 63 Saint Mary's (Cal) 68, Pepperdine 59 San Diego 57, San Francisco 56 NCAA WOMEN'S TOP 25 Thursday 1. South Carolina (12-0) did not play. 2. UConn (11-1) did not play. 3. Texas (11-0) did not play. 4. Notre Dame (12-1) did not play. 5. Texas A&M (12-2) did not play. 6. Baylor (11-1) did not play. 7. Louisville (12-1) did not play. 8. Tennessee (10-2) did not play. 9. North Carolina (12-1) did not play. 10. Duke (8-4) did not play. 11. Kentucky (11-2) did not play. 12. Nebraska (10-2) did not play. 13. Oregon State (10-1) did not play. 14. Maryland (10-2) did not play. 15. Stanford (8-4) did not play. 16. Rutgers (10-3) lost to Ohio State 85-68. 17. Mississippi State (15-0) did not play. 18. Oklahoma State (10-1) did not play. 19. Georgia (12-1) did not play. 20. Iowa (10-2) did not play. 21. Syracuse (10-3) did not play. 22. Arizona State (11-1) did not play. 23. Seton Hall (13-1) did not play. 24. Michigan State (8-5) did not play. 25. DePaul (9-4) did not play. NCAA WOMEN'S FAR WEST E. Washington 69, Weber St. 55 Montana 64, N. Colorado 58 N. Arizona 64, Sacramento St. 60 S. Utah 86, Portland St. 74 NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 39 24 9 6 54 107 104 Vancouver 35 21 11 3 45 103 94 San Jose 38 20 13 5 45 104 96 Calgary 39 21 15 3 45 114 103 Los Angeles 38 18 12 8 44 103 94 Arizona 37 14 19 4 32 86 121 Edmonton 38 8 22 8 24 82 131 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 38 25 11 2 52 119 81 Nashville 36 24 9 3 51 106 78 St. Louis 37 22 12 3 47 108 93 Winnipeg 38 19 12 7 45 96 92 Dallas 36 17 14 5 39 108 118 Minnesota 35 17 14 4 38 100 98 Colorado 37 14 15 8 36 96 112 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 39 24 11 4 52 127 100 Montreal 37 24 11 2 50 100 86 Detroit 38 20 9 9 49 108 95 Toronto 38 21 14 3 45 128 114 Boston 38 19 15 4 42 101 103 Florida 35 16 10 9 41 82 93 Ottawa 36 15 14 7 37 97 99 Buffalo 38 14 21 3 31 76 128 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 37 23 9 5 51 111 87 N.Y. Islanders 37 25 11 1 51 117 103 Washington 37 19 11 7 45 108 96 N.Y. Rangers 35 20 11 4 44 107 89 Columbus 35 16 16 3 35 89 110 Philadelphia 37 14 16 7 35 103 113 New Jersey 39 13 19 7 33 83 111 Carolina 37 10 23 4 24 73 100 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday's games Toronto 4, Boston 3, SO N.Y. Islanders 5, Winnipeg 2 Tampa Bay 5, Buffalo 1 N.Y. Rangers 5, Florida 2 Pittsburgh 2, Carolina 1 Columbus 3, Minnesota 1 Detroit 3, New Jersey 1 San Jose 3, Anaheim 0 Dallas 6, Arizona 0 Colorado 4, Philadelphia 3, OT Calgary 4, Edmonton 3, OT Thursday's games Washington 3, Chicago 2 Los Angeles at Vancouver, (n.) Friday's games Florida at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Montreal at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 4 p.m. Toronto at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Edmonton at Colorado, 6 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Calgary, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Saturday's games Ottawa at Boston, 10 a.m. Nashville at Los Angeles, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Montreal at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Toronto at Winnipeg, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 5 p.m. Columbus at Arizona, 5 p.m. Detroit at Vancouver, 7 p.m. St. Louis at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Odds GLANTZ-CULVER LINE For Jan. 2 NCAA Football TODAY Armed Forces Bowl At Fort Worth, Texas Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Pittsburgh 3 (531/2) Houston TaxSlayer Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Tennessee 3 (511/2) Iowa Alamo Bowl At San Antonio UCLA 11/2 (591/2) Kansas St. Cactus Bowl At Tempe, Ariz. Washington 61/2 (561/2) Oklahoma St. TOMORROW Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl Florida 7 (561/2) East Carolina SUNDAY GoDaddy Bowl At Mobile, Ala. Toledo 4 (67) Arkansas St. NFL TOMORROW Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog at Carolina 61/2 (38) Arizona at Pittsburgh 3 (461/2) Baltimore SUNDAY at Indianapolis 31/2 (49) Cincinnati at Dallas 61/2 (48) Detroit NCAA Basketball Favorite Line Underdog at Stanford 15 Washington St. Youngstown St. 1 at Ill.-Chicago at Cleveland St. 101/2 Milwaukee at Wright St. 41/2 Detroit Valparaiso 3 at Oakland Florida St. 2 at Mississippi St. at N. Illinois 5 UC Riverside UTEP 71/2 at North Texas at Rice 21/2 UTSA at Utah 161/2 Southern Cal at Colorado 5 UCLA at California 21/2 Washington at Quinnipiac 5 St. Peter's Rider 31/2 at Marist at Fairfield 11/2 Siena Manhattan 2 at Niagara at ETSU 91/2 VMI at Canisius 61/2 Monmouth (NJ) at N. Dakota St. 4 Oral Roberts at South Dakota 4 Nebraska-Omaha IPFW 11/2 at W. Illinois at Denver 41/2 S. Dakota St. NBA Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog Cleveland 31/2 (196) at Charlotte Brooklyn 1 (196) at Orlando Detroit 31/2 (204) at New York Dallas 61/2 (212) at Boston at New Orleans Pk (1981/2) Houston at Thunder 61/2 (2071/2) Washington at Milwaukee 2 (1941/2) Indiana at Phoenix 141/2 (212) Philadelphia Atlanta 31/2 (198) at Utah at Golden State 6 (2111/2) Toronto Memphis 4 (2041/2) at Lakers NHL Favorite Line Underdog at Pittsburgh -140/+120 Tampa Bay Florida -150/+130 at Buffalo at Carolina -110/-110 Philadelphia Montreal -145/+125 at New Jersey at Minnesota -155/+135 Toronto N.Y. Islanders -115/-105 at Calgary at Colorado -230/+190 Edmonton at Anaheim -145/+125 St. Louis Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League Arizona Cardinals: Signed OT Cameron Bradfield to a futures contact. HOCKEY National Hockey League Minnesota Wild: Assigned F Tyler Grao- vac to Iowa (AHL). | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 2015 2 B

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